Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
International

Like Emailing With Anne Frank: Syrians Head Online To Find Canadian Sponsors

The Canadian Press, 03 Apr, 2016 11:47 AM
    OTTAWA — Muneer al Zahabi finally got tired of waiting. 
     
    For nearly three years, his family had been in Jordan, among over half a million Syrians there crammed into apartments and camps. It was safer than sleeping in the bathtub in their house in Syria for protection from missiles, but they wanted out.
     
    The UN officially declaring them refugees ensured his two older children could go to school. But the piece of paper provided little other day-to-day benefit. Syrians can't legally work in Jordan, so even though Zahabi has picked up piecemeal graphic design work — he worked in the industry for 15 years in Syria — it wasn't stable and the pay low. 
     
    They wanted a home in another country. But his family is five of 4.2 million refugees. To date, only about 180,000 resettlement spaces are available worldwide. Canada has offered over 38,000 of them since 2013. But the people most often chosen for new homes here and elsewhere aren't families like his — educated, healthy, with his fluency in English and their professional backgrounds.
     
    "My wife said we needed to wait in line, wait for our turn, there were hundreds ahead of us," Zahabi, 40, said in an interview from Amman.
     
    But the call from the UN never came. So, six months ago, Zahabi decided to take things into his own hands.
     
    He'd heard good things about Canada. As a Muslim, he could practise his faith and in Toronto he felt he'd find a community that would be welcoming.
     
    On the Immigration Department website, he found the list of more than 80 organizations who hold agreements with the government to facilitate the private sponsorship of refugees. And he started emailing them.
     
    "Nobody believed me," he said. "They didn't understand how a refugee could be contacting them directly. There was this barrier between us."
     
    Then the Liberals were elected and promised to resettle 25,000 Syrians in a matter of months. Private groups working with the formal sponsorship agreement holders started springing up across the country. There are more than 600 such groups in Toronto alone.
     
    So Zahabi looked them up too, posting his story on their Facebook pages and directly emailing the websites of others.
     
    The response, if there was one, was often similar — disbelief, mistrust. It upset him, he said.
     
     
    "What is it exactly people think refugees are? Do I have be naked, crawling through a forest, to be a refugee? Do we have to die on a beach somewhere to be seen and respected as a human?" he asked.
     
    Then late last year, something clicked.
     
    Patricia Chartier had helped set up the email address for her Toronto-based sponsorship group when the group of 30 relative strangers banded together to help a Syrian family.
     
    She was shocked by how many letters came directly from Syrians. The first was from a 13-year-old girl, who claimed to still be in Syria and asked for help to escape.
     
    "I kept thinking — if this was 1944, it would be like emailing with Anne Frank," Chartier said.
     
    Among the emails was Zahabi's.
     
    Chartier's group couldn't help him directly but something drew her in. Maybe it was the fact she was a former ad copywriter and he was a graphic designer and had common ground, she said.
     
    They kept up a correspondence, often via Skype, and she began trying to find someone who would sponsor his family.
     
    To date, they have a few leads, but nothing concrete. Word that the Liberals have cut off how many sponsorship applications for Syrians they will process this year means it's unlikely Zahabi and his family will make it to Canada before 2017 if they are accepted.
     
    Zahabi does not want to get his hopes up too high. But at least someone was finally willing to listen, he said, and in Chartier, he now has a Canadian friend. 
     
    "We are a regular family, just like so many of yours," he said. "Except we are trying to escape, to save our lives, from a war."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Diplomat Harinder Sidhu Australia's New Envoy To India

    Indian-Origin Diplomat Harinder Sidhu Australia's New Envoy To India
    She is the third Indian-origin envoy in India, after the US and Canadian envoys and the second Indian-origin Australian high commissioner in India.

    Indian-Origin Diplomat Harinder Sidhu Australia's New Envoy To India

    Pervez Musharraf In ICU After High Blood Pressure

    Pervez Musharraf In ICU After High Blood Pressure
    Former President of Pakistan and chief of All Pakistan Muslim League, Pervez Musharraf was on Thursday admitted to hospital after he fainted at his home.

    Pervez Musharraf In ICU After High Blood Pressure

    Indian Lawyer Abhinav Bhushan Named South Asia Regional Director At International Arbitration Court

    Indian Lawyer Abhinav Bhushan Named South Asia Regional Director At International Arbitration Court
    The first Indian to be appointed as deputy counsel of the ICC earlier, Bhushan “will be based in its Asia offices in Singapore and will take on part of the role of the outgoing regional director, Sylvia Tee”

    Indian Lawyer Abhinav Bhushan Named South Asia Regional Director At International Arbitration Court

    Four Indian Americans Selected To US National Academy Of Engineering

    Four Indian Americans Selected To US National Academy Of Engineering
    Four Indian American engineers are among 80 new members selected to the prestigious US National Academy of Engineering (NAE) for their valuable contributions to the society.

    Four Indian Americans Selected To US National Academy Of Engineering

    Nuns Who Help Homeless Face Eviction In Costly San Francisco

    Nuns Who Help Homeless Face Eviction In Costly San Francisco
     Sister Mary Benedicte wants to focus on feeding the hungry lined up outside a soup kitchen in a gritty part of San Francisco.

    Nuns Who Help Homeless Face Eviction In Costly San Francisco

    Analysts Pan Canada's Plan To Arm Kurdish Fighters In Northern Iraq

    OTTAWA — The government is facing calls to reconsider a plan to arm Kurdish fighters with automatic weapons and mortars because they could fall into enemy hands or be used to harm innocent civilians.

    Analysts Pan Canada's Plan To Arm Kurdish Fighters In Northern Iraq