Waterloo Region Record

Internatio­nal students face growing mental distress in Canada, advocates warn

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR

When Gobindbir Singh describes the stress internatio­nal students are under, he remembers a young man who called in tears.

Unable to pay his tuition for the upcoming semester, the student said his parents were selling their home in India and it still wasn’t enough.

He had asked friends to lend him money and tried getting an extension from the college.

Completely desperate, he turned to Khalsa Aid Canada.

“He literally cried over the phone,” said Singh, a project manager for the organizati­on in Ottawa, which supports internatio­nal students by providing free groceries once a month and winter coats.

“He said, ‘I have tried everything, and you are the last resort.’ ”

The story is one example of the difficult situations internatio­nal students are finding themselves in as the cost of living skyrockets in Canada and it becomes more difficult for newcomers to find work.

These challenges have become more noticeable as the number of internatio­nal students in the country has jumped in recent years.

In 2023, more than 900,000 foreign students had visas to study in Canada — more than triple the number from 10 years ago.

Post-secondary institutio­ns and policymake­rs are facing significan­t scrutiny over the increase as colleges and universiti­es increasing­ly use internatio­nal student tuition to supplement inadequate government funding.

Meanwhile, more stories are surfacing of internatio­nal students living in substandar­d housing and relying on food banks.

Singh, a former internatio­nal student himself, said stress around finding work, paying for high tuition and adjusting to life in Canada can take a toll on a student’s mental health.

Often, the students don’t know where to seek help.

Dealing with immigratio­n issues or a family matter back home only makes the situation worse, he added.

Thushara Rodrigo, Sri Lanka’s consul general in Toronto, recently issued a warning to parents to stay informed about how their children are doing, after a 19-year-old Sri Lankan student was charged with killing six people, including four children, in Ottawa last week.

Police have not assigned a motive or divulged the circumstan­ces that led to the attack.

Some of those who spoke with The Canadian Press were quick to caution that based on the limited informatio­n available now, it is difficult to draw any link between the horrific case and the general experience­s of internatio­nal students.

Rodrigo says he regularly hears from Sri Lankan students who are looking for help finding a job, and reeling from the shock of how much it costs to buy groceries and pay rent in Canada. That’s why he decided to put out the warning, he said. He added that given Sri Lanka’s economic situation, there is “a very big demand” for people to emigrate, and families will mortgage their homes or borrow money to send their children to what they hope is a land of better opportunit­ies.

The problem, he said, is the image painted by educationa­l consultant­s hired to recruit and match students for schools in Canada.

He said the students don’t know how difficult it is to find a job and that if they find one, they will have to work late into the night — working as Uber drivers, for example — and wake up early for class after a 16-hour day.

“They are under severe pressure.”

Sri Lankan students ask for help looking for work, he said.

Sarom Rho from the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change said the root cause of the problem is that internatio­nal students are not afforded the same rights and protection­s as permanent residents.

For example, internatio­nal students cannot get public health care in most provinces.

“What this does is add an incredible amount of pressure and stress and sense of exclusion,” Rho said.

Students are also under immense strain to find work after graduation as they strive for permanent residency.

Narinder Singh said he’s noticed a disturbing trend: his Sikh temple in Surrey, B.C., has sent the bodies of 30 students back to India since 2021, and cremated around 15 others.

Some died by suicide and accidents, he said, but the majority died from drug overdoses as a toxic drug crisis ravages the province.

Singh, president of the Gurdwara Dukh Nivaran, said he believes one of the reasons students start using drugs is to deal with the mental distress of living in a place where they cannot afford housing or food, and to cope with loneliness.

“They had a different picture in their mind,” he said.

“When they came here, the situation is totally, totally different.”

Singh said he would not recommend that parents in India send their aspiring students to Canada.

His temple offers welcome packages for new students that include a mattress and other necessitie­s. He said many families don’t send enough money for them to survive.

Jatinder Singh, the national director of Khalsa Aid Canada, said the need has been growing steadily over the past four years.

In Ottawa alone, the organizati­on has some 920 students registered from 51 different countries.

A new phenomenon, he said, is hearing from parents who are searching for a missing child. He estimated at least one case comes across his desk a week.

“Invariably, what we find is that a student has become unhoused or has become drug addicted, and is basically living on the streets or, you know, living in malls for as long as they can during the day and they’re not studying anymore.”

Singh blamed that on a lack of wraparound services for students.

“When they are having issues, there’s really no one to turn to.”

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Gobindbir Singh of Khalsa Aid Ottawa, a former internatio­nal student himself, said stress around finding work, paying for high tuition and adjusting to life in Canada can take a toll on a student’s mental health.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Gobindbir Singh of Khalsa Aid Ottawa, a former internatio­nal student himself, said stress around finding work, paying for high tuition and adjusting to life in Canada can take a toll on a student’s mental health.

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