Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Group Works To Encourage Muslim Families To Become Foster Caregivers In GTA

The Canadian Press, 13 Aug, 2018 12:32 PM
    TORONTO — Shahzad Mustafa remembers thinking of his own childhood when a worker from the Children's Aid Society visited his mosque to talk about the importance of Muslim families fostering children of the same faith.
     
     
    His mother had taken in three Muslim foster children for a few months when he was young — an experience he said had a profound impact on his life.
     
     
    As the CAS worker told the congregation in Markham, Ont., last year about the scarcity of Muslim foster families in the region, Mustafa says he was struck by a need to act — a feeling that eventually motivated him to launch an organization dedicated to encouraging Muslims in the Greater Toronto Area to become foster caregivers.
     
     
    "We should be looking after our kids and we should be part of a bigger solution," the 50-year-old told The Canadian Press.
     
     
    "As immigrant communities become more prominent within Canadian society, there needs to be more outreach within those communities to bring more families into the foster-care movement."
     
     
    The organization, called FosterLink, launched in March with support from Mercy Mission Canada, a Muslim community development group that Mustafa is the director of.
     
     
    FosterLink hosts events at mosques to raise awareness about fostering and connect with potential caregivers, Mustafa said. So far, it has recruited about 50 people who are going through a months-long application process that could see them become foster parents.
     
     
    "We've definitely seen a huge interest," he said. "The intake process is very rigorous ... foster care isn't meant for everyone and there are strict requirements."
     
     
    According to the Ontario Association of Children's Aid Societies, between 2016 and 2017 there were almost 13,000 children and youth in care during any given month.
     
     
    The Children's Aid Society of Toronto didn't provide exact figures on how many Muslim children are in foster care, but said there was a need for more caregivers of that faith.
     
     
    "We understand that when we take kids from one culture and put them in homes that are of a different culture, that is not in their best interest," said Mahesh Prajapat, Chief Operating Office of CAS Toronto.
     
     
    "Identity is critical, but it's not just identity. It's the feeling that you are somewhere comfortable...from food...to customs.
     
     
    Fostering children involves looking after a child who is under the temporary care of Children's Aid until their original guardians are deemed fit enough to take them back or the child is adopted.
     
     
    To become a foster parent through Children's Aid, families must complete a home study evaluation to see if their homes meet safety standards, according to the Ontario Association of Children's Aid Societies. Caregivers also undergo training where families learn about abuse and neglect a child may have faced.
     
     
    For Reshma Niazi, one of a few Muslim foster parents in the Greater Toronto Area, providing a supportive temporary home for a child of her faith is a way of following the teachings of her religion.
     
     
    Islam, she said, teaches the importance of caring for your neighbours, something fostering allows her to do.
     
     
    "You know in your heart that you're purely doing this for the sake of the child, this isn't about you anymore," she said. "This is about giving back to the community, giving back to these children who just need temporary homes."
     
     
    Niazi and her husband became foster parents 13 years ago and have cared for between 15 and 20 children, she said. The couple also have a son and two adopted children, one of whom is a former foster child she cared for.
     
     
    While fostering isn't easy, it's incredibly rewarding, said Niazi, who has encouraged other Muslim families to become foster caregivers as well.
     
     
    "For the couple of weeks, couple of months, your life changes. Now you've got this extra person in the house," she said. "When you give the child back, you know you did your piece."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    28-Yr-Old Surrey Man Charged After North Delta Road Rage With Bear Spray

    28-Yr-Old Surrey Man Charged After North Delta Road Rage With Bear Spray
    A Surrey man has been charged after an altercation on the 11200 block of 72nd Avenue in Delta.

    28-Yr-Old Surrey Man Charged After North Delta Road Rage With Bear Spray

    Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge

    Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge
    Police in Medicine Hat say that when the business called them last week about the money, they arrested the man and searched his backpack.

    Police Say Money With Anti-Semitic Messages Lead To Inciting Hate Charge

    Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto

    Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto
    Two men rescued from rapidly rising waters in an elevator that flooded during an intense rainstorm in Toronto said focusing on family and faith kept them going as they grappled with the fact that they could be moments away from death.

    Close Call For Two Men In Flooded Elevator During Heavy Rain In Toronto

    Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.

    Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.
    BURNS LAKE, B.C. — The latest weather forecast in British Columbia calls for a cooling trend, but provincial firefighting officials say they are bracing for the cold front to bring intense lightning capable of igniting more forest fires.

    Firefighters Brace For Intense Lightning, Minimal Rain, More Wildfires In B.C.

    Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm

    Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm
    The kingdom has also cancelled new trading with Canada, rescinded student scholarships and recalled thousands of Saudi students studying in Canada and barred Canadian wheat imports.

    Saudi Arabia: Justin Trudeau Says Canada Will Continue To Be Firm

    N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic

    N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic
     A 43-year-old New Brunswick man has died after being stung by a wasp, although his family says he had not previously displayed signs of an allergy.

    N.B. Man Dies After Single Wasp Sting, Had No Idea He Was Allergic