Edmonton Journal

Sponsorshi­p requests overwhelm Canadians

EVEN STILL, IT'S NOT AN EASY PROCESS — SPONSORS AND CASH ARE NEEDED

- BRYONY LAU

Every day Andrea Mccoy receives up to five emails from refugees desperate to come to Canada. As the messages flood in, she writes back: “I can't help you at this time.”

She works for the Anglican diocese on Vancouver Island, which has privately sponsored more than 800 refugees since 2016. But its parishes cannot resettle everyone who writes.

Stephen Watt fields 20 such requests a day. He runs a website, Northern Lights Canada, that matches refugees with sponsors. He tries to help because refugees have “no money, no resources … no hope,” Watt said.

Meanwhile, Action Réfugiés Montréal receives so many queries that its staff can't keep track, according to its executive director, Paul Clarke.

Private sponsorshi­p gives citizens the power to offer refugees a new life in Canada. It's an alluring and unique alternativ­e to resettleme­nt by the United Nations, which in 2019 resettled less than one per cent of the world's 20 million refugees.

The result: a deluge of requests and difficult decisions for Canadians.

Nonetheles­s, thousands sponsor every year. Their generosity is a bright spot in a time of tightening border restrictio­ns. Under President Donald Trump, the United States abandoned its traditiona­l role as the world's leader in refugee resettleme­nt.

Meanwhile, Canada resettled more refugees than any other country in 2018 and 2019, the majority through private sponsorshi­p.

Even so, the odds of being privately sponsored are slim. Because sponsors can name a specific person or family, refugees need relatives, friends or a complete stranger in Canada to help them.

And sponsors must be willing to raise the funds — $16,500 per person, more for a family — and file a mountain of paperwork.

Some Canadians are undaunted, sponsoring again and again. Others feel overwhelme­d and withdraw. And refugees keep writing, using social media to draw attention to their plight.

Vania Davidovic of Oakville, Ont., has helped 56 refugees since 2015, either as a sponsor herself or by finding other Canadians to take on that role. Most were Syrians she met through Facebook. All were in dire situations. Davidovic simply brought as many to Canada as she could.

But eventually it became too much, even for her. Davidovic recently stopped befriendin­g refugees on Facebook because it was too hard saying no.

“I don't even know how to say to someone, `I can't help you,'” she said.

Davidovic was part of the surge in private sponsorshi­p as Canada scrambled to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees in 2015 and 2016. At that time, there were more volunteers than refugees to welcome. That's no longer the case.

Yet the government expects Canadians will still help refugees, even though other crises do not receive the same attention — and volunteers — as Syria did. In October, it set a target of 22,500 privately sponsored refugees per year for the next three years.

The history of private sponsorshi­p — more than 325,000 refugees since 1978 — shows Canadians are firm believers in the program. While some sponsors drop off, others stick it out, sometimes for decades, forming “a civil society movement like no other,” said Jennifer Hyndman, a professor at York University's Centre for Refugee Studies in Toronto.

And there's no shortage of refugees anxious to come. The image of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greeting Syrians at the Toronto airport in 2015 gave many hope.

Basel, a Syrian refugee whose name is being withheld for his safety, watched the footage and cried.

“I wished Justin Trudeau could see my situation,” he said in a recent video call from Lebanon.

Basel needed a sponsor in Canada. He turned to social media and contacted people he found online, often through Facebook pages dedicated to refugee issues.

Although private sponsorshi­p is open to all refugees who meet government criteria, it currently skews toward refugees with ties to Canada.

The Anglican diocese on Vancouver Island and Action Réfugiés Montréal focus on refugees with relatives nearby. Neither can help the strangers whose emails arrive daily. It was sometimes possible to sponsor someone like this when there were many new volunteers a few years ago. Now it doesn't happen any more.

Instead, the diocese works with former refugees who live on the island. They help identify others — often but not always friends and relatives — in danger overseas. Sponsorshi­p begets more sponsorshi­p.

Hyndman agrees. Her survey of more than 500 sponsors showed that after Syrian refugees arrived, three of every five sponsors were asked to bring others.

Abdullah Sarwari is a former Afghan refugee. The Canadian government brought him, along with his mother and two younger siblings, to Vancouver in 2019. When he found out about private sponsorshi­p, he decided to help others.

In S e p t e m b e r, h e launched a Facebook group to attract donors and sponsors for his friend Sikandar Ali, a fellow Afghan living precarious­ly in Indonesia. Immediatel­y, more than a dozen refugees sent messages asking if they, too, could be sponsored.

Sarwari can't help them, yet. He doesn't even have enough money for Ali.

“I want them to have some kind of hope, but at the same time, not too much,” he said.

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 ?? RICARDO PINTO/FILES ?? Abdullah Sarwari, a former refugee from Afghanista­n, was resettled in Vancouver in 2019, along with his mother and siblings. He then launched
a Facebook group to raise funds to help his friend, a fellow refugee, also resettle through private sponsorshi­p.
RICARDO PINTO/FILES Abdullah Sarwari, a former refugee from Afghanista­n, was resettled in Vancouver in 2019, along with his mother and siblings. He then launched a Facebook group to raise funds to help his friend, a fellow refugee, also resettle through private sponsorshi­p.

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