Alberta Somalis Work to End Violence, Deaths
Community leaders ask for tolerance, positive integration.
(Edmonton, June 19, 2011
Ceegaag Online)
Edmonton Somali
groups are desperately searching for a way to end the
ongoing gang violence that has deeply impacted the
community—violence that left two dead in the last month
alone.
Across Alberta, 34 Somali men have been killed since 2006,
with three of those deaths occurring this year.
Now, two town hall meetings have been scheduled for later
this month to bring members of the community together in an
effort to explore what can be done about the escalating
deaths.
Abdi Hussein, executive director of the Somali-Canadian
Cultural Society of Edmonton, says the violence is a
manifestation of complex social factors, which must first be
understood to find an appropriate solution.
“Things don’t happen overnight,” he said.
Hussein points to the struggle of families—many of whom were
refugees fleeing Somalia after it collapsed—that were
ill-prepared for the culture shock and obstacles that would
greet them in Canada. Many of the families are headed by
single mothers whose husbands were killed during the Somali
civil war in 1991.
Initially, the impossibility of getting proper
identification
documents from a collapsed state meant they could not apply
for permanent residency in Canada. Prolonged refugee status
led to disadvantages in family reunification, mobility,
education, and employment.
Language, cultural, and religious differences place deeper
invisible blocks for Somali immigrants hoping to integrate
fully into Canadian life—maybe more so than any immigrant
group.
Somalis who come to Canada are often disappointed to find
that what education they do have is either not transferable
or not recognized without Canadian work experience.
“What do those kids think when their father, who was an
engineer back home, is now driving a taxi,” says Hussein.
“How do you convince that kid to go and get an education;
how do you motivate him?”
Many children who had inconsistent education during
Somalia’s conflict had much difficulty adapting to Canada’s
education system and could not find the support they needed
to succeed, Hussein says.
These factors have resulted in Somalis facing some of the
lowest incomes and living
standards in the country since the 1990s, which has led to
ongoing social problems for the communities in poverty.
This lack of opportunity and integration is what leads some
Somali youth to come to Alberta from Ontario, seeking to
land a job in the oilfield and make a decent living. But
often they arrive to find that jobs are not available or
they don’t have the skills required.
That’s when the $5 billion Alberta drug trade becomes
extremely tempting.
“Before they know it, they’ve gotten lured into the quick
cash,” says Hussein.
Last year the Alberta government put $1.9 million toward
programs intended to give Somali youth job training and work
experience to steer them away from the lucrative drug trade.
But Hussein says this money is not going to the
organizations that do the ground work directly in the
community, alleging it is mainly a public relations strategy
that is “window-dressing” the real issues.
“All this money is spent and actually recycled through
organizations that are all connected to the government, who
get that money in the name of helping Somali people, but at
the same time will not even hire one Somali person to do the
job,” he said.
“Really it’s not dealing with the real core issues, how to
help—truly help—these people.”
Amal Issa, youth coordinator for Somali Canadian Education
and Rural Development Organization (SCERDO), says education
is crucial for Somali youth to find opportunities and avoid
a destructive path. She says the results of SCERDO’s job
skills programs have been very encouraging.
“We definitely have seen results and they have been very
very positive. The main thing for us is that the youth have
been able to see that they have hope, they have a future,
they have opportunities. They really just needed someone to
tell them that and someone to guide them in the right
direction.”
Of great concern to Hussein are media representations that
focus on sensational and negative images of the Somali
community while rarely showing the strength, vibrancy, and
dignity that truly characterizes the Somali people.
He fears the youth are constantly “internalizing” these
negative representations, which act as a barrier to their
progress.
The only time we actually have anything to say about Somali
people is when another young man dies, right? But that’s not
what we’re all about. We’re a lot of hard-working people
trying to fit in this country, working very hard,” he says.
“We lost a lot of Somalis, but 99.9 percent are doing good
and contributing good things in Canada and in Alberta, but
that’s not reported, that’s not noticed, that’s not
amplified. Every little negative is amplified 10 times. So
that’s our challenge, and what we’re fighting now is that
image -that negative image
that’s persisting because of all the things that have
happened.”
Source: Theepochtimes
webmaster@ceegaag.com
|