HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 2016-10-19, Page 5Wednesday, October 19, 2016 • News Record 5
Celebrating five years of helping immigrants, refugees resettle in Huron
Darryl Coote
Postmedia Network
Sitting at a table in the Tim
Hortons on Highway 21 in
Goderich was Gezahgn
Wordofa, founder of the Mul-
ticultural Association Perth -
Huron, with a muffin he
bought from the coffee shop
in his hands that had a birth-
day candle for a child turning
five jammed in its centre.
"This is my office," he said
on Oct. 5. "A lot of coffee. A lot
of coffee. A lot of muffins.
Even today, the birthday [of
the Multicultural Association
Perth -Huron] we didn't order
a special cake. We are eating
muffins"
It was a special day, he said.
It was the fifth anniversary
since he founded the Multi-
cultural Association Perth -
Huron in 2011.
And since its founding, his
organization has helped over
1,600 new immigrants to Can-
ada, the majority of them refu-
gees, resettle in Huron -Perth.
"We are helping and also
running newcomer settle-
ment services. That means if
the newcomer needs a pass-
port or citizenship, we fill it
out. We help them through
our local services," he said.
Wordofa said he and his
volunteers, two of whom
joined him at the Tim Hortons
for the festivities, help the new
immigrants in anyway they
can. They drive them to
places, bring them groceries,
introduce them to others like
themselves, help them with
paperwork, register their chil-
dren for school and countless
other things that most
saw how difficult it was for newcomers.
As an immigrant, I used to go to Kitchener
for paper work, I used to go to London
for small amounts of paperwork. That's
what was difficult for me. And that's why
started this."
— Gezahgn Wordofa, founder of the Multicultural
Association Perth -Huron
Canadian -born citizens have
little trouble with.
It is very difficult for new-
comers to resettle in Canada,
Wordofa said, and an immi-
grant himself he realized the
difficulties they face and
wanted to help others.
"I saw how difficult it was
for newcomers. As an immi-
grant, I used to go to Kitch-
ener for paper work, I used to
go to London for small
amounts of paperwork. That's
what was difficult for me. And
that's why I started this," he
said.
While driving to these
places might seem a nuisance
but surmountable for those
who have lived here a long
time, the issue of having to fill
out paperwork for a refugee is
more than daunting, he said.
What most people might
not understand, he said, is
that people relocating here
from Afghanistan or Syria are
coming directly from a refu-
gee camp to Toronto Pearson
International Airport with a
final destination of Clinton,
Goderich or any other small
town in Huron.
To them, he said, Goderich
seems like the capital of
Canada.
"Most of them say, 'Oh my
god! I can't believe I'm living
in the big city"' Wordofa said.
This is just evidence of how
large the transition is for them
and how little they necessarily
understand their new
surroundings.
It's incredibly difficult for
new immigrants to resettle in
rural towns, Wordofa said,
especially compared to big
cities where there are cultural
communities that help with
integration.
When Wordofa moved to
Huron with his Canadian wife,
he was the only Ethiopian in
the area, he said.
"Of course they are strug-
gling," he said, adding socially
there are many obstacle, but
his foundation tries to support
them through offering coffee
get togethers, dinners and
special cultural outings.
He said what surprises refu-
gees who relocate here the
most is when he hands them a
key to their new home or car.
They are just besides them-
selves, he said, by aspects of
life that are basic to most of us.
"They don't' believe us," he
said. "Sometimes they are
very shocked. Sometimes
when you go through garage,
they think, `oh this is my bed.'
And they start putting [their
stuff in the garage]. When they
go inside, this is a totally dif-
ferent life. I'm dancing to see
how very happy they are."
He told The Signal Star that
right now all expenses come
out of his pocket and the
pockets of his volunteers.
They don't receive a dime of
funding, he said.
When the organization
started, he was given some
funds from the Trillium Fund
through United Way. In 2015,
United Way cut funding.
The organization's main
office space in Stratford is
being donated by local folk
singer Laura Mckinnon.
He is hoping to get funding
in the future. Right now he
relies on the kindness of vol-
unteers, churches and the
community for support.
Wordofa said he is grateful
to his volunteers because it is
them who allow him to help
new immigrants to Canada.
And because of their efforts
the organization is growing,
which to Wordofa translates to
helping more people. And
that is his goal for the organi-
zation, to help more and more
people.
He also wants to have more
immigrants who have reset-
tled here as volunteers. Like
himself, they understand tri-
als newcomers to Canada
From left, Gezahgn Wordofa, founder of the Multicultural
Association Perth -Huron, and volunteers Jama Botun and
Chris Fournier hold up a sign for the non-profit during an event
celebrating its fifth anniversary.
must go through.
Those from war torn coun-
tries have trauma, he said.
Those who have been there
before might be better suited
to help.
He also has hopes of open-
ing a satellite office some-
where in Huron.
To offer them more ser-
vices, he said, they need an
office, not a coffee shop.
Wordofa added that they do
meet immigrants at other
places, such as churches but
not everyone feels safe there.
"That's why our cafes are for
everybody," he said.
Huron County, he said, has
been very welcoming to new-
comers and he is proud of
that.
"We are lucky, very blessed
to live is a wonderful country,
very nice communities....
The community is welcoming.
For me, I'm very proud of
these communities, he said.
When asked why this day,
this anniversary, is important
to him, Wordofa said it just
shows how fortunate we are to
live in a country like Canada.
"We are lucky that we have
existed this long. We serve
them. We give them this ser-
vice. We give them this
opportunity. Our new com-
ers, they go to school, they
work, they are driving, they
have a nice life. They are
integrated into the commu-
nities," he said.
Five years ago he started
his organization in a cafe
similar to the one he was sit-
ting in during the interview,
he said. But now he has
helped over 1,600 immi-
grants and refugees relocate
to Huron -Perth.
"I'm very proud," he said.
nder
onstruction
Justine Alkema Clinton News Record
The vacant lot on Albert Street has begun to undergo a facelift after the
Salvation Army burnt down on the location in 2010. Council has put some
funds towards the lot to plant some trees and provide other landscaping.
They are planning on putting only $3000 into the space so it can easily
be repurposed in case it is sold in the future.