Toronto Star

Making dream weddings come true

Floriana Project organizer collects gowns, donates them to Haiti

- CARMELA FRAGOMENI THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR

At any given time, Nicola Topsom has 40 used and donated wedding dresses in her Burlington apartment that she eventually ships or takes to Haiti to give brides the wedding of their dreams.

Haiti is among the 20 poorest countries in the world and remains the poorest in the Western Hemisphere, according to the World Bank.

Topsom, 44, a personal support worker, started the Floriana Project, a small volunteer charitable organizati­on, in 2015.

It collects donated wedding gowns and bridesmaid, flower girl and mother-of-the-bride dresses to send to the impoverish­ed Caribbean nation.

Three years after starting the project with her sister, Abigail, Topsom has shipped or taken 500 wedding dresses to Haiti.

She is helped twice a year by Hamilton charity Joy and Hope of Haiti, which offers her space for 10 boxes of dresses in containers of goods it sends to Haiti.

The rest of the time, Topsom and two or three other volunteers visit Haiti twice a year, taking two suitcases of gowns each.

The Floriana Project has three “retail” stores in poor neighbourh­oods of Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital, where brides, attendants and women attending a wedding can rent or buy gowns for whatever price they can afford.

“We always tell the customers to pay what they can,” says Topsom. As a principle of dignity, they all want to pay something, she says, although “our policy is nobody gets turned away if they don’t have the money. And we tend to hover around the $50 mark.”

The stores employ three staff, who in turn support 40 family members.

So Topsom’s dream of spreading some happiness in Haiti is also fulfilling a dream to create jobs there.

“I wanted to do something that was job creation and had sustainabi­lity,” she said. “I wanted to know people could generate income and have steady work.”

As for the brides, they can now afford the kind of beautiful gown they could only dream of before.

“Now it’s not just a dream that will never happen.”

Topsom was especially grat- ified that a caregiver at the orphanage from which she adopted her youngest daughter — Divna, now 10 — took a threehour bus ride to get her wedding gown at one of the shops.

Another special moment was a community wedding that Topsom helped organize for 64 couples in one day with a local pastor in Cap Haitian. The Floriana Project supplied all the dresses.

Being a a personal support worker for palliative and Alz- heimer’s patients may be Topsom’s regular job, but the Floriana Project is her joy.

“I do this work for fun … it’s a passion project,” she says.

Art Duerksen, who helps out with Joy and Hope of Haiti, says Topsom’s outreach is “amazing. And to be doing it primarily on her own — it’s a wedding for goodness sake. It’s a very special thing.”

Topsom’s next trip is on Sept. 4 and, this time, she plans to visit a maternity clinic to deliver baby outfits made from the remaining good parts of any damaged wedding dresses.

Topsom, despite a full-time job, being married and caring for two adopted daughters — the oldest, Shantaya, 14, is from Malawi — somehow finds time to devote to the Floriana Project.

She also recently started up a small sewing school in India for abandoned and widowed women to learn something to generate income for themselves.

To donate a gown or dresses, contact Topsom by email at FlorianaPr­oject@gmail.com.

 ?? SCOTT GARDNER THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR ?? Nicola Topsom and her daughter, Divna, 10, stand with a recent donation of wedding dresses for the Floriana Project.
SCOTT GARDNER THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR Nicola Topsom and her daughter, Divna, 10, stand with a recent donation of wedding dresses for the Floriana Project.

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