Monday, July 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Maryam Monsef, Canada's First Afghan Cabinet Minister, Says She Was Born In Iran

The Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2016 11:57 AM
    OTTAWA — Liberal MP Maryam Monsef, widely touted as Canada's first Afghan-born cabinet minister, has issued a statement saying she only recently learned from her mother that she was in fact born in Iran.
     
    The minister of democratic institutions, who will turn 32 on Nov. 7, says she and her two sisters never held Iranian citizenship and were always considered Afghan citizens, but she was not born in Herat, Afghanistan, "as I was led to believe for my whole life."
     
    "It's fair to say I have experienced a range of emotions over the past few days as I have tried to understand this with my family," says the statement.
     
    Monsef said she's learned she was actually born 200 kilometres from the Afghanistan border in Mashhad, Iran.
     
    Monsef, born in 1984, says her parents fled Afghanistan as the security situation deteriorated, and that after her father's death her mother never talked about what Monsef calls "the unspeakable pain" of those early years.
     
    "She told us she did not think it mattered," Monsef said of her mother, Soriya Basir.
     
    "We were Afghan citizens, as we were born to Afghan parents, and under Iranian law, we would not be considered Iranian citizens despite being born in that country."
     
    Profiles of Monsef since her appointment to cabinet last Nov. 4 have consistently referenced her family travelling back and forth across the Afghanistan-Iran border as the security situation allowed.
     
     
    The Monsefs came to Peterborough, Ont., as refugees in 1996 when Maryam was 11 years old.
     
    U.S. President Barack Obama, in an address to Parliament earlier this year, made a point of noting Monsef's Afghan heritage as a sign of Canada's inclusiveness.
     
    "And we see the refugees who feel that they have a special duty to give back, and seize the opportunity of a new life," Obama told a joint session of Parliament on June 29.
     
    "Like the girl who fled Afghanistan by donkey and camel and jet plane. And who remembers being greeted in this country by helping hands and the sounds of robins singing. And today she serves in this chamber and in the cabinet because Canada is her home."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Spectre Of Chinese 'Fox Hunt' Looms Over Li's Visit To Ottawa With Trudeau

    Spectre Of Chinese 'Fox Hunt' Looms Over Li's Visit To Ottawa With Trudeau
    Trudeau is under fire from opposition parties for pursuing the treaty, which is a feature of a new high-level security dialogue he established with Beijing on his recent visit.

    Spectre Of Chinese 'Fox Hunt' Looms Over Li's Visit To Ottawa With Trudeau

    Friends And Colleagues Of Canadian Professor Jailed In Iran Rally In Montreal

    Friends And Colleagues Of Canadian Professor Jailed In Iran Rally In Montreal
      Many of them gathered at a rally in Montreal today to call for Homa Hoodfar to be freed.

    Friends And Colleagues Of Canadian Professor Jailed In Iran Rally In Montreal

    Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.

    Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.
    Deanna Desjarlais of Saskatoon, who was a sex-trade worker with addiction problems, was twice reported missing earlier this year to police in Vancouver.

    Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.

    Edmonton Police Lay 'Paper Terrorism' Charge Against Self-Proclaimed Freeman

    Police in Edmonton have charged a self-proclaimed Freeman on the Land with what they are calling a paper terrorism campaign against a peace officer.

    Edmonton Police Lay 'Paper Terrorism' Charge Against Self-Proclaimed Freeman

    One Person Dead, Another Hurt After Struck By Bus In Banff: RCMP

    One Person Dead, Another Hurt After Struck By Bus In Banff: RCMP
    BANFF, Alta. — One person is dead and another injured after a tour bus hit two pedestrians in Banff National Park.

    One Person Dead, Another Hurt After Struck By Bus In Banff: RCMP

    Boy, 10, In Desperate Need Of Life-Saving Stem Cell In Burnaby

    Boy, 10, In Desperate Need Of Life-Saving Stem Cell In Burnaby
    On December 20, 2015 he suffered from internal haemorrhaging that sent him to the hospital where doctors were able to stabilize him within 36 hours of constant blood transfusion and steroids. 

    Boy, 10, In Desperate Need Of Life-Saving Stem Cell In Burnaby