Toronto Star

A kid from Rwanda who dared to dream

‘Sheer determinat­ion’ drove Star reporter to better life and citizenshi­p

- GILBERT NGABO STAFF REPORTER

I would never have imagined it possible.

Indeed, for about one third of my life I never even knew Canada existed.

I grew up in the rural parts of Rwanda, where running water and electricit­y were nonexisten­t and access to education and health care was only reserved to a privileged few. People like me seldom dared to dream of any future, let alone a bright one.

Yet on Tuesday this week I proudly took my oath of citizenshi­p.

Me, the skinny kid from a decrepit subsistenc­e farmland near the Tanzanian border, now a Canadian citizen.

My father once bought me a T-shirt with the words “Canadian Tire” emblazoned on its front. I had no idea what they meant. Nor did I know how to pronounce them.

I didn’t learn to speak the language I now work in as a journalist until much later, in high school and university.

As I sat in that Scarboroug­h immigratio­n office Tuesday with 90 other new Canadians, I couldn’t help but reflect on my journey. By the time we were singing “O Canada” in unison — for my very first time as a Canadian — I shed tears of joy.

I got my chance to be a part of Canadian fabric during my undergradu­ate journalism program at the University of Rwanda, back in late 2000s. That’s when a Canadian initiative, spearheade­d by Carleton University professor and former Star reporter Allan Thompson, which was training journalist­s in Rwanda, offered me an internship in Toronto.

During the three-month internship, first with CBC’s As It

Happens, then with Metroland community papers, I also applied for further studies at dif- ferent Canadian institutio­ns. Later I got accepted at Ryerson — the first internatio­nal student in the school’s master’s journalism program.

My first four months in Canada were terrifying. Having only lived in tropical weather in a temperate climate, I genuinely thought winter would freeze me to death. I risked breaking my bones from constantly tripping on black ice. Loneliness was depressing­ly awful. Regular food tasted terrible to me, for I had never eaten things such as sushi or hotdogs.

Even the simplest things didn’t make sense to me — like the sun setting as early as 4 p.m. or as late as 10 p.m., or people eating their lunch at their desks. I was also pretty ignorant on diversity matters, and once scandalous­ly shocked my class- mates when I said every one of them who wasn’t Black was white.

But I made it through the two challengin­g years. I graduated. I even got jobs, first in temporary corporate communicat­ions and later as a cub reporter at Metro. Four years ago, I finally fulfilled all the requiremen­ts to apply for permanent residence.

And, nine years since I first arrived, here we are. Looking back, a number of factors stopped me from boarding the first flight out of here and instead make this my home.

I have chronicled in the pages of Metro, my previous employer, how my love and devotion to the Toronto Raptors ranks high on the list of those factors. Many a night I’d bury myself into the stories of their struggles, watch videos of their high and lowlights, and grow a bond to the city through basketball.

Classmates and friends I met along the way became my little family away from home. Getting a job in my field and a chance to do what I love for a living certainly helped.

But ultimately, like the stories of other immigrants, it was just sheer determinat­ion to get a shot at building a better life that really drove me. I’ve since been working, paying taxes and abiding by the law of this land. My partner and I now have a mortgage in Whitby, and I commute to work on the GO. Altogether these steps fill me with joy and make me feel responsibl­e.

And that sense of responsibi­lity isn’t about to wane. Quite the contrary, in fact. I’ve been craving the chance to cast my vote in municipal, provincial and federal elections. It still puzzles me why I couldn’t do so as a permanent resident, despite having closely followed, and, in some instances, covered electoral campaigns here in Toronto.

I really believe thousands of permanent residents across Canada, who are working their tails off to make themselves and their communitie­s better, deserve that chance of making their vote count.

While I acknowledg­e there are still many shortcomin­gs in our society — systemic racism, police and community relations as well as a need for economic opportunit­ies for all — I want to thank Canada for accepting me with open arms. I can’t take that for granted.

And I hope it’s reciprocal. The prime minister summed it up pretty well in a welcome letter — yeah, Justin Trudeau did really send me a letter: “Thank you for choosing Canada. Welcome home.” I am home.

 ?? RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR ?? Star reporter Gilbert Ngabo was among 90 other people earning their Canadian citizenshi­p Tuesday. Sitting in the immigratio­n office, he “couldn’t help but reflect” on his journey.
RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR Star reporter Gilbert Ngabo was among 90 other people earning their Canadian citizenshi­p Tuesday. Sitting in the immigratio­n office, he “couldn’t help but reflect” on his journey.
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