National Post (National Edition)

Internatio­nal couples planning reunions on return to Canada

New exemption allows partners to enter country

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER The Canadian Press

Alia Youssef and Mohamed El-Sawah have been in a long-distance relation - ship for the better part of a year, though they live just a 35-minute drive apart.

Youssef lives in Windsor, Ont., El-Sawah in a suburb of Detroit, Mich.

When the Canada-U.S. border was closed in March due to COVID-19, they were forced to place many of the cultural and religious traditions important to their Egyptian, Muslim engagement on hold.

Youssef has yet to meet her husband-to-be’s parents in person. The two have been looking at wedding venues and getting to know each other’s families over video calls.

“We’re engaged with no rings, let’s call it that,” ElSawah said in a phone interview on Wednesday.

Couples like Youssef and El-Sawah have been in a grey area since pandemic-related travel restrictio­ns came into effect, unable to reunite due to their unmarried status. But some hope appeared last week when Ottawa announced it would ease some border restrictio­ns.

Starting Thursday, romantic partners of Canadians can apply to enter the country, with documentat­ion proving at least a yearlong relationsh­ip. Extended family members including grandparen­ts, adult children and grandchild­ren and those seeking entry for compassion­ate grounds may also apply.

Specifics on who qualifies, what documents are required and how to apply will be defined in greater detail on Thursday.

It’s a welcome avenue for couples whose lives have been placed on hold for the last eight months. Youssef, El-Sawah and others in internatio­nal engagement­s can now proceed cautiously with their wedding plans — factoring in quarantine requiremen­ts, work obligation­s and limits on other relatives allowed to travel and participat­e.

“We’re really happy, but it’s just now we have to take what we have and work with it,” Youssef said.

The pair plan to reunite in December, when El-Sawah can take the required two weeks off from work. At the end of his quarantine, they hope to finally exchange rings and hold a small engagement party, though ElSawah will be the only member of his biological family there.

While Ottawa has stressed that nobody should make travel plans until they’ve been approved under the program, some have eagerly started booking accommodat­ions and packing their bags.

Sarah Campbell of Stratford, Ont., cried tears of happiness at the announceme­nt. She’s been separated from her fiancé, Jacob Taylor, during the pandemic and through a cancer diagnosis this July.

Campbell and Taylor, who lives in Bath, England, are gathering documents showing proof of their relationsh­ip in anticipati­on of the soon-to-be-announced requiremen­ts.

“We’re hoping he can be here by Saturday,” she said in a telephone interview. “Jacob is ready to go.”

If everything goes according to plan, they hope to be married by the end of the month — the day after Taylor’s quarantine ends.

Kaylee Carson of Cleveland, Ohio, also moved quickly after hearing the news.

She snapped up an available Airbnb in Barrie, Ont., where her Canadian fiancé, Darren Quesnel, works.

“I went ahead and booked,” Carson said by phone.

“I’m going to be there for two months, so I just booked the first month and I figured if I’m not there by then he can just go stay at the Airbnb until I get there.”

She’s happy an end to their separation is in sight, though the eventual wedding date in the U.S. is still to be determined.

“It’s just a relief to know that I’m going to get to go see him,” she said.

David Poon has been running a campaign along with other families not covered by the former travel exemptions, asking Ottawa to adapt immigratio­n measures to accommodat­e those left out.

He said participan­ts are grateful the government found a solution.

“We know that it was an incredibly difficult problem to solve,” he said from Ireland,

WE KNOW THAT IT WAS AN INCREDIBLY DIFFICULT PROBLEM.

where the Canadian doctor is currently staying with his partner.

The key demand — allowing adult children and non-married couples to reunite in Canada — has been won, but Poon said the biggest hurdle remaining for the approximat­ely 7,500 people involved in the campaign is inability for many to take time off work to quarantine.

Those on temporary visas also face challenges in bringing their loved ones to Canada.

He stressed that the campaign isn’t fighting quarantine rules, but looking for a solution so more people can take advantage of the program — like requiring the Canadian partner to isolate once their significan­t other leaves the country, no matter the length of their stay.

The uncertaint­y of waiting and the challenges of planning a wedding long-distance during a pandemic have been painful, ElSawah said. But the experience has brought the couple together on a deeper level, and convinced him beyond a doubt that he’s found a soulmate and life partner in Youssef.

“It affirmed my love for this woman,” he said. “The silver lining to me is I know a thousand per cent, a million per cent that she’s the one and she’s willing to put the effort.

“Whatever life throws at us, we’ll be able to handle it.”

 ?? ROB GURDEBEKE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Alia Youssef at her home just outside of Windsor on Wednesday in the same clothes
she wore the last time she saw her American fiancée who is stuck in Michigan.
ROB GURDEBEKE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Alia Youssef at her home just outside of Windsor on Wednesday in the same clothes she wore the last time she saw her American fiancée who is stuck in Michigan.

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