Toronto Star

Former foster child getting royal treatment

Rosimay Venancio receiving award for helping others and will meet the Queen

- LAURIE MONSEBRAAT­EN SOCIAL JUSTICE REPORTER

Rosimay Venancio fled civil war in Angola as a child and was abandoned in Toronto by her parents as a teenager. Although foster care was a respite, her transition to independen­ce was fraught with depression, a suicide attempt and homelessne­ss.

Today, the bubbly 25-year-old is completing her second year of a bachelor’s degree in health policy at York University and working as an administra­tive assistant at the University Health Network.

The key to her miraculous transforma­tion, she says, was the encouragem­ent of a supervisor at work who had been in foster care just like her.

“I thought, wow. If she could do it, so can I. Suddenly, anything seemed possible,” she says.

The epiphany prompted Venancio to create CHEERS, a mentorship program linking teens in foster care with young adults who have successful­ly made the transition to independen­t living.

“I have seen what this can do in my own life,” she says. “I want to ensure other youth get the same chance.”

Vivian Patruno, 18, was headed for a homeless shelter earlier this year when Venancio became her mentor and everything changed.

“Rosie made a few calls and really pushed for me to get into this house,” Patruno says of the supportive-housing program where she lives with several other teens transition­ing from foster care. “I can’t believe how she advocated for me.”

This month Venancio is among 60 young people in the Commonweal­th — and only three in Canada — receiving the prestigiou­s Queen’s Young Leaders Award for transformi­ng her life and the lives of others.

As part of the award, Venancio will fly to London to meet the Queen.

CHEERS, an acronym for Creating Hope and Ensuring Excellent Roads to Success, has garnered praise from the Catholic Children’s Aid Society of Toronto, Covenant House youth homeless shelter and Ontario’s child welfare secretaria­t.

But Venancio still needs $75,000 for a pilot project to turn her mentorship dream into reality.

“Everybody acknowledg­es that we need a mentorship program for youth in care, but nobody is following through,” she says. “I just feel that somebody has to do it. Why not use my experience to help?”

Venancio was 4 years old when her family fled civil war in Angola for South Africa and age 9 when she arrived in Toronto.

By the time she was 14, her parents had separated, the civil war in her home country was over and her mother, who was unable to secure legal status in Canada, was on her way back to Angola with Venancio’s three younger siblings.

“My mother left me with family friends because I was doing so well in school. She wanted me to have a future,” she says.

But it was not the future Venancio or her mother had envisioned.

Her new family, an Angolan couple with a newborn, used the young teen as their nanny and housekeepe­r while they worked as office cleaners.

Venancio eventually explained the situation to her high school guidance counsellor, who suggested foster care. She was 15.

“I had an amazing foster mom,” Venancio says.

“For the first time in my life, I had someone to pick up my socks . . . someone to stay up late and help me with my homework. It was a real home. It was a real family.”

But it was short-lived. Legally, foster care ends at age 18. Since Venancio would be turning 18 in the middle of Grade 12, her children’s aid worker decided it would be best if she moved into her own apartment at the beginning of the school year. She was just 17. Within three months, she crashed. She drank a bottle of floor cleaner and ended up in hospital. She recovered and the depression lifted.

But it would be six more years of couch-surfing and struggling to stay in school before Venancio landed a part-time job at the University Health Network and enrolled at York. When she discovered that a supervisor she admires at the hospital had gone into foster care at age 15, just like her, it changed everything, Venancio says.

“That’s when I knew,” she says. “I had to do something for my younger foster sisters.”

Venancio has turned to online crowdfundi­ng to help launch her mentorship program at gofundme.com/cheersprog­ram

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? Rosimay Venancio, running, shares a laugh with Vivian Patruno during a visit Thursday. Venancio is mentoring Patruno, who has recently left her foster home for independen­t living.
CARLOS OSORIO PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR Rosimay Venancio, running, shares a laugh with Vivian Patruno during a visit Thursday. Venancio is mentoring Patruno, who has recently left her foster home for independen­t living.
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