Toronto Star

Mississaug­a mayor rallies to raise $5M for refugees

Bonnie Crombie calls on groups to sponsor 32 Syrian families

- SAN GREWAL URBAN AFFAIRS REPORTER

As images of Syrian families perilously trying to find a future home continue to shock Canadians, the mayor of Mississaug­a has announced plans to raise money to resettle refugees in the GTA.

Bonnie Crombie met with 75 people — business, religious, community and political leaders — Wednesday, and has announced a plan to raise $5 million so 32 refugee families can come to Canada.

“I have had a number of community, faith and business leaders reach out to me to discuss opportunit­ies to do more to help Syrian refugees from a municipal perspectiv­e,” Crombie said in a statement Thursday.

Working with the group LifeLine Syria, which aims to settle at least 1,000 Syrian refugees in the GTA over the next two years, Crombie will help create a “Mississaug­a Fund.”

She said that at Wednesday’s meeting members of the city’s Muslim community issued an “Eid Challenge” for each mosque in the city — there are more than 40 — to raise $50,000 during Eid celebratio­ns this month.

The city will use resources, such as its website and staff, to help co-ordinate the effort and send informatio­n to residents who want to help.

Meanwhile, local imams, Muslim business owners and many non-Muslim business leaders were among the group who pledged to raise $5 million.

Former Mississaug­a Liberal MP Omar Alghabra, a candidate in this year’s federal election, arrived in Canada from Syria in 1989. His mother and three sisters still live there. He was at Wednesday’s meeting hosted by Crombie.

“It was a moment of deep pride to see Mayor Crombie and my city reach out to the mosques, NGOs, business leaders and say: ‘How can we help, what can we do?’”

Alghabra, asked if his Syrian family and friends feel that Canada has let their people down in the aftermath of 3-year-old Alan Kurdi’s death which spurred intense

“I have had a number of community, faith and business leaders reach out to me to discuss opportunit­ies to do more to help Syrian refugees from a municipal perspectiv­e.” BONNIE CROMBIE MISSISSAUG­A MAYOR

worldwide attention on the migrants, said he didn’t want to politicize the issue.

“This isn’t about how Syrians or anyone else sees Canada; it is about us, it is about how Canadians see ourselves — who are we?”

Councillor Carolyn Parrish, a former Liberal MP, was also at Wednesday’s meeting. She is a five-time visitor to the Middle East and longtime advocate for people from the region trying to resettle here.

“In sharp contrast to the federal government’s embarrassi­ngly inadequate response to the Syrian refugee crisis, Mississaug­a stepped up to the plate yesterday and pledged $5 million and sponsorshi­p for 32 families. With less than a week’s notice, the mayor filled a room at 7 a.m. with a true representa­tion of a modern Canadian city,” Parrish said. “Business leaders and community groups enthusiast­ically pledged $5 million for sponsorshi­ps and immediate necessitie­s for the hundreds of thousands languishin­g in camps. There wasn’t a single reference to security, religion — only an opening of wallets and hearts.”

 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR ??
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR

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