Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
International

Syrian Refugees Grateful For Public, Government Response To Pepper-spray Attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2016 11:51 AM
    VANCOUVER — Ahmad Hwichan gestures to his throat and grimaces as he talks about coughing up blood and hearing children screaming in the chaotic aftermath of last week's pepper-spray attack in Vancouver.
     
    The newly arrived government-sponsored refugee from Syria was one of about a dozen people who were sprayed by a man on a bicycle outside a welcome ceremony around 10:30 p.m. on Friday.
     
    Despite the suffering, the unsavoury incident has failed to temper the enthusiasm and gratitude Hwichan and other refugees feel toward their adopted country and its citizens.
     
    "This doesn't change my point of view of Canada. It will never change," Hwichan said through a translator on Tuesday, four days after the attack.
     
    "This was probably one guy who was drunk or, I don't know, crazy."
     
    He added in English without the help of a translator: "I love you Canada so much." 
     
    The pepper spraying prompted universal condemnation from political leaders, including Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson, B.C. Premier Christy Clark and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.
     
     
    Syrian refugee Youssef Ahmad al-Suleiman, also hit in the attack, recounted how he and his fellow newcomers were stunned after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took to Twitter and apologized on behalf of himself and the Canadian people.
     
    "We're not used to this back home in our own country," al-Suleiman said, using a translator. "(Syrian President) Bashar al-Assad killed around 300,000 people and did not apologize once.
     
    "Canada stays Canada — Canada of dreams," he added. "One individual does not represent the whole Canadian people."
     
    Al-Suleiman recalled seeing a man wearing a helmet cycle up to their group, which was waiting on the sidewalk outside a Muslim Association of Canada centre for a bus to return to their residence. The man sprayed something once or twice toward the crowd and quickly left, he said.
     
    Hazaa Sahal and his son were also struck by the spray.
     
     
    The 44-year-old father of three described resorting to a strategy used by protesters in Syria, who would pour Pepsi or Coke on their faces to counteract the effects of tear gas during anti-government demonstrations.
     
    But he said the technique proved ineffective against pepper spray and actually worsened the stinging.
     
    Sahal explained how immediately after the incident some refugees wished they had never come to Canada.
     
    That feeling quickly evaporated when they saw the overwhelming positive response from police, health officials, the government and the Canadian public, he added.
     
    "There is always good and bad. But in this country the good is more than the bad," Sahal said in Arabic.
     
    "We felt like nothing bad happens here and goes without being punished, or the actor being held accountable."
     
    Shadi al-Radi said the entire experience actually strengthened his faith in his new country.
     
    "We saw the attention that was given by the prime minister himself. Now we have more confidence in Canada and more confidence in the government," said al-Radi through a translator. The 30-year-old came to Canada with his wife and one-year-old child.
     
    "We immediately forgot about what happened when we saw all of this attention."
     
     
    Vancouver police spokesman Sgt. Randy Fincham has said officers are investigating Friday's incident as a hate crime.
     
    Canada has committed to take in 25,000 Syrian refugees by the end of next month.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    'We Feel Ashamed': Pakistani Relatives of California Shooter Tashfeen Malik

    'We Feel Ashamed': Pakistani Relatives of California Shooter Tashfeen Malik
    Tashfeen Malik, 29, and her husband Syed Farook, 28, gunned down 14 people at a social services centre in San Bernardino, an act praised by the Islamic State group who hailed the couple as "soldiers" of its self-proclaimed caliphate.

    'We Feel Ashamed': Pakistani Relatives of California Shooter Tashfeen Malik

    Pakistan To Help In California Shooting Probe

    Pakistan will share information with the US about the California shooting in line with the international obligations, the country's interior minister said on Sunday.

    Pakistan To Help In California Shooting Probe

    India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok

    India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok
    India and Pakistan on Sunday quietly resumed their stalled dialogue in Bangkok, with their National Security Advisors discussing an array of contentious bilateral issues and promising to "carry forward the constructive engagement".

    India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok

    Media Swarming California Shooters' Home Recalls Incident In B.C.

    Media Swarming California Shooters' Home Recalls Incident In B.C.
    VANCOUVER — A chaotic scene unfolded Friday when a landlord pried open the door of the California townhouse where San Bernardino mass shooters Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik lived.

    Media Swarming California Shooters' Home Recalls Incident In B.C.

    Indian Model Aafreen Rachel Vaz Wins Beauty Pageant Sub-Title In Poland

    Indian Model Aafreen Rachel Vaz Wins Beauty Pageant Sub-Title In Poland
    It was a moment of glory for India when Aafreen Rachel Vaz clinched the title of Miss Supranational 2015 Asia and Oceania at the Miss Supranational 2015 beauty pageant here.

    Indian Model Aafreen Rachel Vaz Wins Beauty Pageant Sub-Title In Poland

    What's In A Name? Democratic 2016 Front-Runner Hillary (Rodham) Clinton Knows More Than Most

    What's In A Name? Democratic 2016 Front-Runner Hillary (Rodham) Clinton Knows More Than Most
    WASHINGTON — As a young girl growing up in suburban Chicago, Hillary Rodham decided she'd never change her last name. Three decades later, an entire state debated her childhood choice.

    What's In A Name? Democratic 2016 Front-Runner Hillary (Rodham) Clinton Knows More Than Most