Horowhenua Chronicle

Volunteers get ready to help refugees

Around 80 Colombians set to settle in Levin over space of year

- Janine Baalbergen

When you first arrive it’s the little things that take a long time like finding out where to buy breakfast, the first trip to the supermarke­t, asking for things. It can be overwhelmi­ng. Ute Kreplin, NZ Red Cross volunteer

Levin is getting ready to receive the first refugee families from Colombia this month and the refugee support team are ready to help wherever they can. “We have over 60 expression­s of interest on our database with new enquiries coming through most weeks. Currently 24 people have completed the training,” New Zealand Red Cross volunteer co-ordinator Taara Kemble said.

“We are always very grateful for new interest from local people.

“Refugee support volunteers are from all walks of life. We have retired folk who were teachers, nurses and managers and working age people such as a lecturer, an agricultur­al worker, a student nurse practition­er, and a self-employed person.

“Some people are from Levin with solid roots in the community through various local clubs and organisati­ons like Menzshed, knitting groups, the Quilt Club, fishing clubs, churches, and our own branch members.”

Other volunteers such as Steve Fowler, Ute Kreplin and Norton Atkins have moved to the region more recently. Taara said all of them want to help people.

Steve, Ute and Norton are three refugee support volunteers based in Horowhenua. They are among the 12 fully trained local volunteers with New Zealand Red Cross, ready and waiting to support Levin’s newest residents.

Along with support from key staff members, each family is assigned a small team of local volunteers.

The volunteers provide the new families with a link to the community during their first six months.

They help orientate new arrivals, such as showing them around the town, setting up online banking, and going with them to their first appointmen­ts such as to the school or the doctor.

Ute and Norton and their three young children Emil, 5, Manu, 3, and Alvie, who is just 1, live in Foxton. The couple met in Cusco in Peru and have visited several countries in Latin America, including Colombia.

Ute, originally from Germany, is a psychology lecturer, while Norton, a New Zealander from Turakina, works part-time as a research technician on Massey University farms. They came back to New Zealand in 2020.

The couple decided to support the Colombian families settling in Levin because they wanted to do something in the community, and they share a love of South America.

Ute also knows first-hand what it’s like to arrive in a country and not speak the language from her experience going to study in the UK.

“When you first arrive it’s the little things that take a long time like finding out where to buy breakfast, the first trip to the supermarke­t, asking for things. It can be overwhelmi­ng,” she said.

When they arrived, Norton and

Ute found New Zealand expensive.

Ute hopes they can make the first few months easier for the families by showing them things that cost less.

“I don’t think the concept of opportunit­y shops exists in South America, so we can introduce that, show them the farmer’s market, and things you can do for free like the community gardens and the best playground­s for children.”

Also, she initially found the school system difficult to understand as it was different to her own experience, so she hopes sharing her new-found knowledge could be helpful too.

Steve, another volunteer, is a former school principal from the UK. He retired to New Zealand with his wife Sue eight years ago to be with their children and grandchild­ren who had settled here earlier. He also knows what it is like to move countries.

“We came here voluntaril­y from a place where the language is the same and other things are familiar, but we still had to find out a lot ourselves, where to post a letter, get the car tested. For those former refugees who are settled here it must be very different experience when you come from a different culture and have a different language.”

When Steve arrived in Levin, he felt welcomed into the community.

“It’s a good-hearted, friendly community. I like the informalit­y too. The shop assistants are incredibly friendly and helpful. We’ve taken te reo Ma¯ori classes, I volunteer with the Citizens Advice Bureau once a week and we’ve joined the local folk music society and the church.”

Levin is a diverse community. Ma¯ori make up a quarter of the population and the area has the largest Pacific Island population outside of Auckland per capita.

 ?? Photos / Di Tatham ?? Steve Fowler, a retired school principal, is ready to help refugees moving to Levin.
Photos / Di Tatham Steve Fowler, a retired school principal, is ready to help refugees moving to Levin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand