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Vancouver, BC: Kurdish community to protest Ottawa’s refugee limit

September 5, 2015 By administrator

By Mike Hager  VANCOUVER — The Globe and Mail,

COMRwHdWsAAbKVfBritish Columbia’s small Kurdish community is rallying around the aunt of a drowned Syrian boy, whose parents had given up hope of settling in Canada, to demand Ottawa accept more refugees fleeing the humanitarian crisis.

Shwan Chawshin, a spokesperson for the non-profit Kurdish House, which plans community gatherings, said his group is organizing the several thousand Kurdish people living in the province to join a rally in Vancouver on Sunday calling on the Canadian government to at least double its stated commitment to admitting 10,000 Syrian refugees by the end of 2017.

Tima Kurdi, who is Kurdish, is expected to be there, he said. Ms. Kurdi is the Coquitlam woman who had once planned on sponsoring her brother’s family before his wife and children drowned off the coast of Turkey. Photos of Ms. Kurdi’s three-year-old nephew Alan’s limp body were “very sad not just for the Kurdish community, but to the whole world,” Mr. Chawshin said.

“We want Canada to pay attention to those countries that are torn apart by war,” Mr. Chawshin said. “To many people, Canadian immigration policy is prejudiced and discriminatory.”

Mr. Chawshin, who also runs the KurdTV program on a local multicultural channel, said he remembers being only the second Kurd in the province when he fled northern Iraq and arrived in British Columbia, by way of Sweden, in 1984. Most of the Kurdish population is spread across Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Armenia and Syria, so arrivals list those countries as their nationality when entering Canada, Mr. Chawshin said. That makes it difficult to know the true size of the B.C. community, which is estimated at between 3,000 and 4,000.

Several hundred Kurdish refugees arrived in Metro Vancouver in the mid-1990s after fleeing Saddam Hussein’s renewed oppression in northern Iraq, according to Chris Friesen, who is the director of settlement services at the non-profit Immigration Services Society of B.C. Most of those immigrants are now “doing exceptionally well,” he said.

Ottawa honoured a 2013 commitment to resettle 1,300 Syrian refugees this past March and a spokesman with Citizenship and Immigration Canada says the department has so far settled 1,074 new Syrians as part of its January goal to resettle another 10,000 over the next three years.

The government wouldn’t provide a breakdown of where those Syrians have put down roots, but Quebec has taken the largest share and B.C. has welcomed only 72, according to Mr. Friesen, who also chairs the Canadian Immigrant Settlement Sector Alliance lobby group.

Mr. Friesen said those refugees often “are arriving with varying degrees of trauma, because the war is so near to them.”

“Many family members are dealing with horrific migration experiences,” he said.

Most are provided with housing allowances matching B.C.’s $375 welfare rates and have settled in Vancouver suburbs such as New Westminster, Surrey and Coquitlam, Mr. Friesen said.

After news broke of the Kurdi family’s tragedy, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said Thursday he has asked the city manager to review how the municipality can offer more immediate assistance to refugees from Syria and Iraq.

Shirley Bond, B.C.’s minister responsible for labour, issued a statement Thursday saying immigration decisions “lie entirely with the federal government,” but that her province will continue to welcome the settlement of refugees.

Mr. Friesen said the imbalance in how many Syrian refugees the provinces take in exists because Canada is overly reliant on the private sponsorship of refugees, by either faith groups or family members, many of whom are living in Quebec.

Mr. Friesen’s national association is calling on the government to initiate its refugee emergency contingency plan, created in 2002 after the Kosovo crisis, to expedite the immigration of Syrian refugees with family in Canada. As well, the group wants Ottawa to consult with the United Nations and European Union to finalize an emergency settlement target, which could greatly increase the number of Syrian refugees Canada agrees to welcome.

Source:

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: BC, Kurd, refugee, Vancouver

Memorial in Vancouver for Alan Kurdi and his brother who drowned while trying to flee Syria

September 5, 2015 By administrator

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Tima Kurdi, the aunt of two Syrian boys  Photograph by: Jason Payne

Tima Kurdi, the aunt of two Syrian boys
Photograph by: Jason Payne

COQUITLAM — A memorial service is planned in Vancouver Saturday for two little Syrian boys who drowned in Turkey in a tragedy that has attracted worldwide attention.

A picture of the body of three-year-old Alan Kurdi on a Turkish beach received prominent worldwide attention and has sparked debate about the plight of refugees from the region.

Tima Kurdi of Coquitlam, B.C., says her nephew, his five-year-old brother Ghalib, and their mother, Rehanna, were buried in Syria by her brother, Abdullah, on Thursday.

She says the family was fleeing Syria, where Islamic State militants had beheaded one of her sister-in-law’s relatives.

Kurdi says the trip was the “only option” left for the family to have a better life in a European country, possibly Germany or Sweden.

She says Abdullah embarked on the risky journey with his family after a bid by another brother to seek refugees status in Canada failed.

Kurdi says she sent Abdullah five-thousand dollars to pay smugglers to take them on a boat.

Family friends have set up an online fundraising campaign to help the Kurdi family.

Source: vancouversun.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Alan Kurdi, Kurd, Memorial, Vancouver

Celebration of Light Team Brazil at Vancouver’s 2015 Video

July 30, 2015 By administrator

2015 Vancouver fireworkMore than 300,000 people flocked to the area around Vancouver’s English Bay for this year’s second Celebration of Light fireworks display, Wednesday night.

The throngs of spectators seemed generally impressed with the pyrotechnics show, put on on by Team Brazil. Vancouver Police say there were 50,000 or 60,000 more spectators downtown, compared to Saturday night, when Team China performed.

Const. Brian Montague said there were the usual liquor pour-outs and trouble with people smoking cigarettes and marijuana on the beach, but it was otherwise fairly peaceful.

“We did have some minor problems, like we usually see every fireworks. It’s the nature of having such a large crowd in a small area, but we managed to deal with it very quickly, and didn’t have anything escalate,” said Montague.

He said the Vancouver Police Marine Unit was kept busy with the heavy boat traffic in English Bay, and there was one incident on the water when someone tried to swim out toward the fireworks barge.

The year’s third and final Celebration of Light fireworks display will be put on by Team Canada this coming Saturday.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Celebration of Light, Vancouver

Weekend warm weather shattered Vancouver’s temperature record

January 27, 2015 By administrator

BY MATTHEW ROBINSON, VANCOUVER SUN

10759567VANCOUVER — Sunshine and record-breaking highs in Vancouver on Sunday punctuated the end of heavy rain that washed through the South Coast Friday and Saturday.

At Vancouver International Airport, the temperature hit 14 C Sunday, beating the previous high for Jan. 25 — set in 1992 — by 2.2 degrees. The temperature also came within 1.3 degrees of the all-time January high, set in 1981.

The weekend rains were part of a watery meteorological phenomenon sometimes called a Pineapple Express — a term thought up by U.S. National Weather Service forecasters years ago for the odd appearances of unbroken channels of wet, stormy weather that would stretch from Hawaii to the northern west coast of North America.

On arrival Friday, the express began to unload some of the more than 100 millimetres of rain it would deliver to some cities in the region over the course of two days.

West Vancouver saw 77 mm of rain on Friday alone — just a little more than what fell in Vancouver, Pitt Meadows and Coquitlam, and about 15 mm more than Howe Sound.

But the express didn’t carry nearly enough moisture to drown the region’s record January rainfalls. Among those records are the more than 171 mm that fell in Burnaby on Jan. 18, 1968, and the 160 mm that dumped on North Vancouver on Jan. 18, 2005.

So although that rain seemed like an awful lot, once it’s put into perspective, it would have taken a pair of Pineapple Expresses to refill the record book.

Unfortunately for skiers, the warm weather accompanying the express meant all that moisture failed to fall as snow on local mountains, which had zero centimetres of new snow between Friday and Sunday.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: shattered, temperatur, Vancouver

Historic Panel on Genocide and Literature Held at ‘Modern Language Association Convention’ in Vancouver

January 27, 2015 By administrator

MLA-Armenian-event-1024x768(L-R) Professor James Najarian, Boston College; Professor Eda Dedabas Dundar, University of Nevada , Reno; Professor Peter Balakian, Colgate University; and Professor Walter Kalaidjian, Emory University

VANCOUVER, Canada—The 130th annual Modern Language Association (MLA) Convention—the largest conference of academic humanities in the world, where several thousand conference papers are given each year—was held in Vancouver this year from Jan. 8-11 and featured a prominent panel titled, “The Armenian Genocide in Literature and Memory.”

The panel was convened and moderated by James Hiester Najarian, Professor of English at Boston College. The three papers given covered a wide range of literature. Prof. Peter Balakian of Colgate University presented a paper titled, “Yeghishe Charents, ‘Dantesque Legend,’ and the Poetics of Atrocity,” which dealt with the young Armenian poet Charents and his transformative poem about the Turkish atrocities he witnessed on a volunteer mission in 1915.

Prof. Eda Dedebas Dundar of University of Nevada, Reno, presented, “The Islamized Armenians of Turkey and Historical Dialogue and Awareness through Fethiye Cetin’s ‘My Grandmother’ and ‘The Grandchildren.’”

Prof. Walter Kalaidjian’s “The Glare of the Real: Light, Trauma, and Genocidal Memory in the Writings of Peter Balakian,” dealt with the poetics of perception in Balakian ‘s memoir Black Dog of Fate and in his poetry.

The panel and discussion was attended by academics and a large number of Vancouver’s Armenian community.

 

Related links:

The Armenian Weekly. Historic Panel on Genocide and Literature Held at ‘Modern Language Association Convention’ in Vancouver

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: convention, Genocide, literatur, Vancouver

2014 HONDA CELEBRATION OF LIGHT (TEAM JAPAN) FIRE WORKS August 2, 2014

August 3, 2014 By administrator

By Wally Sarkeesian photo-of-firework-3Team Japan lit up the night sky over Vancouver on Saturday, August 2 with the final Celebration of Light fireworks display.

Japan Team defiantly was the winner among the three contender USA, France and therefore gagrule.net pick Japan team. congratulation.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Celebration of Light, team Japan, Vancouver

Video Live from Vancouver, BC. Celebration of Light Fireworks (Festival Team France) July 30

July 31, 2014 By administrator

By Wally Sarkeesian

post-pictureThe  beautiful colorful firework took placed at English Bay, Vancouver, BC, Canada. Celebration of light is one of the biggest event in Canada.

Team France performs on the 2nd day of the Honda Celebration of Light at English Bay, Vancouver BC 7/30/2014 #shorefest #celebrationoflight Honda Celebration of Light 2014 team France English Bay Vancouver

last week fireworks team from the United States dazzled hundreds of thousands of Metro Vancouverites on the opening night of the Celebration of Light 2014, the fireworks competition’s 24th year.

Police estimate a crowd in excess of 250,000 gathered at Vancouver’s beaches. Few disruptions or incidents were recorded and people were enjoying themselves at the family-oriented event

Next week Japan team.

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: 2014, BC, Celebration of Light, Vancouver

Vancouver, finally the signe of hope the Armenian St. Vartan & St. Gregory churches joint picnic!

July 26, 2014 By administrator

August 10, 2014 10:00 am – 7:00 pm

The Armenianarmenian-Picnic St. Vartan & St. Gregory churches announce the first joint annual picnic.

Sunday August 10th 2014 10:00 AM to 7:00 PM

location: Deas island park, Delta 6165 HWY 17 #270  Delta, BC.

 

First Joint Annual PIC-NIC

http://stvartanchurch.com/

 

Filed Under: Articles, Events Tagged With: Armenian, churches, picnic, Vancouver

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