Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Syrian Refugees Resettled In Fort McMurray Forced To Flee From 'Fire To Fire'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 May, 2016 11:12 AM
    As members of Fahed Labek's family from war-torn Syria fled the inferno engulfing their adopted Alberta hometown, he recalls them staring back at the flames in Fort McMurray.
     
    "They said, 'OK. We left the fire and now we saw another fire. From fire to fire,' " said Labek, 43, who fled the approaching wildfire on Tuesday.
     
    Labek lives in Fort McMurray with his wife and two children. He helped relocate his mother, sister, brother-in-law and their two children to his home in late February.
     
    They are among about six families of Syrian refugees that resettled in the city in recent months.
     
    All the families are believed to have evacuated Fort McMurray safely, said Amany Darwish, president of The Canadian True Power, a non-profit organization that has helped some refugees get familiarized with the community.
     
    "I'm sure it will bring back memories for them," said Darwish, who was reached Thursday in Fort McMurray where she and her husband remained to help firefighters. "They will be terrified again and I'm sure they are very worried."
     
    Her group provided some refugees with items to help them restart their lives, but she said "they already lost it again because the evacuation was very quick."
     
     
    Labek and his family left in a rush for oilsand workers' camps to the north of the city, expecting a 45-minute drive. Instead they drove for eight hours and when they arrived, apologetic aid workers told them no beds were available.
     
    The family, including his 68-year-old mother who is in a wheelchair, set off again for Edmonton.
     
    When their car broke down they were picked up by other evacuees in two different vehicles. Labek was awake for 42 hours before everyone reunited in Edmonton at about 6 a.m. Wednesday.
     
    "Now we have another story. I have to find a place to stay, I have to find some food," Labek said Thursday.
     
    "We don't have clothes for my kids, we don't have milk. For my kids, we don't even have diapers."
     
    He's stressed about the cost of hotel expenses after they had no luck finding free shelter. 
     
    Labek said his family from Syria understands the disaster is a "different fire" than what they saw in their homeland, but he's concerned they may endure additional trauma to their experiences in the Middle East. 
     
    They have taken some solace in Canadians assisting those whose homes have burned to the ground.
     
    "What (my relatives) saw here is that the people are very helpful. They can't imagine how helpful are they."
     
     
    Darwish said she is sad that refugees who migrated here for shelter and safety have been caught up in more upheaval. But she has faith in the generosity of Canadians, such as those handing out free gas and food to evacuees.
     
    "I'm sure they have support and love from family and local community like Canadians here, everybody helping them," she said.
     
    "I'm sure they will be OK. I'm not worried about them as they were in their country, in Syria."
     
    The fire has left Labek with a new level of empathy for what his relatives endured.
     
    "I have now the same feeling as them. I have my own house in Fort McMurray. I left everything. I just left with my clothes that I wear," he said.
     
    "The same thing they felt when they left Syria and they came here. They came with the clothes as they wear."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pioneering HIV Researchers Among Recipients Of Canada Gairdner Awards

    Pioneering HIV Researchers Among Recipients Of Canada Gairdner Awards
    Each year, seven awards — which are nicknamed the "baby Nobels" because 83 Gairdner winners have gone on to receive Nobel Prizes — are handed out along with $100,000 cheques

    Pioneering HIV Researchers Among Recipients Of Canada Gairdner Awards

    Doctor Says Child Who's Too Stiff To Sit In Car Seat Needs To Be In Hospital

    Doctor Says Child Who's Too Stiff To Sit In Car Seat Needs To Be In Hospital
    Dr. Jonathan James Gamble was responding to questions from the Crown about symptoms that 18-month-old Ezekiel Stephan suffered before he died in March 2012.

    Doctor Says Child Who's Too Stiff To Sit In Car Seat Needs To Be In Hospital

    Manitoba Election Campaign Sees Health Care And Environmental Promises Made

    NDP Leader Greg Selinger says if he is re-elected premier on April 19, he'll bump up funding for research into Lake Winnipeg by half a million dollars.

    Manitoba Election Campaign Sees Health Care And Environmental Promises Made

    Sikh Candidate Prabhjeet Gill Elected Lawmaker In Calgary-Greenway Riding After Byelection

    Sikh Candidate Prabhjeet Gill Elected Lawmaker In Calgary-Greenway Riding After Byelection
    Gill is a real estate appraiser by profession

    Sikh Candidate Prabhjeet Gill Elected Lawmaker In Calgary-Greenway Riding After Byelection

    Surrey RCMP Out To Catch Distracted Drivers

    Surrey RCMP Out To Catch Distracted Drivers
    Surrey RCMP’s Traffic Services, ICBC, and the Surrey Crime Prevention Society are participating in a distracted driving enforcement and education campaign.

    Surrey RCMP Out To Catch Distracted Drivers

    'Why Didn't I Stop Him?' TV Doc On Calgary Mother's Radicalization Battle Airs Thursday

    'Why Didn't I Stop Him?' TV Doc On Calgary Mother's Radicalization Battle Airs Thursday
    A Calgary mother who finds out from a reporter that her son had been killed fighting with an extremist group in Syria is both the subject and voice of a new TV documentary slated to air this week.

    'Why Didn't I Stop Him?' TV Doc On Calgary Mother's Radicalization Battle Airs Thursday