Saturday 27 February 2010

Mrs Idrees A. Khan: Calgary 2010 Immigrants of Distinction Awards Community Services Nominee



2010 Immigrants of Distinction Awards
Community Services Nominee
Mrs Idrees A. Khan

Idrees A. Khan is very conscious of her identity and that of Canada, it tells from upon observation of her work with the Calgary muslim community. A muslim from a conservative background in her native Karachi in Pakistan, Mrs Khan arrived in Canada in 1972, with her degree in Economics from the University of Karachi and embarked on a career in the oil industry in Edmonton.

Having lost her father at an early age, Mrs Khan was raised by her mother who instilled in her a sense of love for community and serving individuals with less luck in society.  Khan was given a good education but she was very aware that even with her education success in her career would be deterred by cultural boundaries tied to women in Pakistan and so she moved to Canada to be able to explore her full potential. Upon arriving in Canada in 1972 she got a job with Esso-Imperial oil in Edmonton. Later she married Zia Khan an accountant and the family moved to Calgary and continued her work in the oil industry by getting a job with Sunoco.

But such is the power of her passion for community service that Mrs Khan changed careers and started to get involved with in the local and growing community of muslims. She was particularly concerned that many of the social issues affecting this Calgary community were not being discussed in the mainstream forums. Calgarians of the muslim religion needed help with education, guidance in getting acclimatized to Canadian culture, learning English as a new language, family and parenting issues as well as access to important basic services like food and clothing for many in difficult economic situations. She went back to Mount Royal College to increase her knowledge of Calgary social challenges  and studied various programmes in social work and administration.

The education she acquired from Mount Royal College helped Khan to found the Muslim Families Network Society in 2003. This initiative brought about a forum through which issues of refugees, immigrants, poverty and family hardships were discussed and solutions sought from a cross section of stake-holders in Alberta. She also started the Muslim Halal Food Bank in 2004 to help with the outsourcing and provision of food to poor Muslims living in Calgary, this food bank offers supplementary basic services to individuals and families on social welfare assistance or unemployment insurance, refugees and new immigrants. 

Mrs Khan offers counseling and support services at the North of McKnight Community Centre by bridging the knowledge and language gap for new immigrants and refugees by providing useful information about the various initiatives available for them as offered by the federal and provincial governments and where to find such services.


Further more,  Mrs Khan also started the Big Sister/Brother program where muslim children can fully embrace their identity, learn the importance of caring, sharing, tolerance, patience and team work. She also has organized many conferences in Calgary where issues that are important to her and the community are discussed by various stakeholders. 
These include; raising teenagers, spousal abuse, children and seniors' neglect and or abuse. In all her work, Mrs Khan gives the youth and parents an opportunity to share their knowledge and skills such that the young can develop into muslim leaders that have a balanced understanding of Islam and how it fits into the western indigenous culture. She continues to volunteer by hosting people in search of emergency at Inn From The Cold Society, Muslim Association of Calgary and at the North of McKnight Centre.

Thursday 25 February 2010

Bea Twumasi: 2010 Calgary Immigrants of Distinction Awards Business Award


Calgary 2010 Immigrants of Distinction Awards

Business Award

Bea Twumasi


Walking into her shop situated on 222, 17 Ave SE Calgary one is reminded of everything about customer care and 'feeling at home.' On top of an array of cosmetic products on display, smiles and laughter are among the most salient features of Bea Twumasi's business.

Beas Braiding and Extensions has been called "Calgary's answer to bad hair", it might as well be but the salon does much more than just hair. In fact it is among the most enduring features of Calgary for hair care and has been an icon of the city life for 17 years. The proprietor of the business; Twumasi, has been braiding and weaving since she was a child in her native Ghana of West Africa having learnt the trade from her mother, she started doing it as a businesses when she moved to Calgary in 1974 and her basement suit acted as a saloon. 

Such is the significance of Bea Braiding and Extensions that it has been featured in the business section of the Calgary Herald, the Calgary Sun, and Global TV's Breakfast show.  The salon is a major participant in the Calgary high schools Beauty Culture Program mentoring students interested in a career in beauty and costmetics. From this program students get a chance to intern at the saloon and some are even luckier as they are retained for employment. Twumasi has also provided hair extensions and accessories to Calgary's movie and music industry players. Currently there are 5 permanent employees of Beas Braiding and Extensions, the salon also exhibits art pieces made by new immigrants to Calgary.


Twumasi grew up as an only child with a single mother in Kumasi a major commercial centre in @@@@Ghana. Her mother Agnes Okyem ensured Twumasi learnt about entrepreneurship earlier in life, she was taught hair braiding at home but the daughter turned out to be a teacher instead but hair care remained her first love was hair care. In 1974, Twumasi immigrated to Canada and has since been living in Calgary with her husband Emmanuel Twumasi an oil engineer, they have three children. 

Immediately after arriving in Canada Twumasi enrolled in the University of Calgary and graduated with a bachelor of Education. Having learnt the ethics of work earlier on from her mother she worked for the Calgary Catholic School Board and cleaned offices in the evenings to take good care of her young family then, she later worked as a Rehabilitation supervisor for people with mental and physical difficulties at the Legion Group Home. In her free time Twumasi started a hair care business in the basement of her family home.

While she worked as a manager at Legion Group her basement salon continued existing and later hired more staff, her client base expanded from a predominantly ethnic composition "and crossed cultural lines" according to Gloria Mensah who has known Twumasi for 25 years . Demand for her services grew so big that her home salon needed an independent premise of its own. In 1993 Beas Braiding and Weaving opened its doors on 17 Eve SE, it was among the first ethnic hair saloons in Calgary back then and Twumasi resigned her managerial job to concentrate on her love of hair care. She hired 6 staff members and according Mensah, many of these maiden staff members have since gone on to open their own hair saloons. 

As a living witness to the great Canadian success story Twumasi wants to share the inspiration of her transition and her success from being a child of a broken family, young and challenged immigrant to Calgary in the 1970s to entrepreneur. Twumasi a Calgary role model, she is part of efforts that enhance the spirit of Alberta as a home for all. From new comers to Canada, young people that are in need of guidance in life and celebrating the true joy of living in Canadda. 

She is currently working with the McBride group which seeks to help job seekers learn skills and trades that they can use to find meaningful employment. She participates in various events like the Carifest, the Calgary Women's Show and Afrikadey. These events are some of the features that make Calgary city a community of fun, work, love, peace and creativity for Calgarians of all walks of life.

Monday 22 February 2010

Natalia Estefania Echeverria-Dubon 2010: Calgary Nominee for the Community Services Award


Nominee for the Community Services Award

Natalia Estefania Echeverria-Dubon was born in 1974 in Guatemala and grew up along with her four of her siblings in a region troubled by inequality, poverty and war. However Estefania's mother dedicated her life to educating her children and grooming them into compassionate and visionary citizens of the world.

Estefania as a result was endowed with a love of people and the world at an early age. Faced with the troubles of Guetamala and the limit these troubles were bestowing on her life she emigrated to Canada at the age of 18 in 1992 settling in Calgary. Estefania says that her philosophy is influenced by the spirit of Canada which she is says is an open country and welcomes people from different places of the universe and turns these people from being strangers to one community.

 "All human beings need someone or something to corroborate their existence. A mother. A friend, A nation. A law. A God. It is my belief that we all need entities that would constantly reassure us that we have a purpose in life and that we belong somewhere. That we are not outcasts, but rather we are welcomed, that we fit in , and that we are in the right place."

She came to Canada in 1992 fours years before the civil war in Guetamala ended. Upon her arrival in Calgary she enrolled in Father Lacombe High School and entered an essay writing competition about "What Does It Mean to Be Canadian?' and was selected as a winner. The next year she emerged second place from a short story writing contest organized by the Latin America Association in Calgary. Since then, Estefania has used her first language (Spanish) to benefit other individuals involved in missionary work as well as students interested in learning Spanish for leisure as well as career purposes.

Currently she teaches Spanish in the non credit continuing education department at the Mount Royal University and her students have but praise for her. "She is by far the best language teacher I have known in my many years of teaching," says Catrina Loman a retired teacher with the Calgary Board of Education. "She is a shining example to other immigrants," Constance Hunt a former Law Professor at the University of Calgary says while another one says; "she stands head and shoulder above all the language teachers I have been exposed to."

In her free time Estefania volunteers her time by teaching Spanish and Latin American culture to different groups and missionaries traveling to the region. She also volunteers at Bow Valley Christian Church, Spanish Christian Fellowship and FairChild Radio 94.7.

Sunday 21 February 2010

Memoirs of the first Msope



BY GEORGE KAGAME

The weather is good today, the sun is fully out and the skies are clear and like all mid mornings on such days the good old the First Msope just finished having what he calls a balanced breakfast. It is the second breakfast of the day. Earlier In the morning before he left home the good old Mfasha, his genial wife, had prepared a nice wonderful send off comprised of a warm cup of milk tea, a banana, mandazi and bread. 

the First Msope loves carbohydrates. They make his cheeks chubby but that is a sign that Mfasha is doing her job well. These are good days in Citi for the First Msope, he has  some concerns and issues with fitting in the new Citi but he lets the complaining and bitching about these issues to be done by others on his behalf. 

For now he is enjoying the good days and he knows fully well in his heart that he has never seen better but paradoxically he believes that someone else is enjoying the benefits of the good days more than him. As such he is jealous and when he returns home in the evening after work he will complain about the current system in Citi to Mfasha and his close buddies at the watering hole, the famous Ship&Anchor in Msingi wa Mji the business capital of Citi.

the First Msope is reveling in the new found fortunes of Citi, he never thought that things would be this good for him after Citi had earlier slid into calamity and then recovered to the gem it was now becoming today. So as he licks his lips and pulls up his trousers concealing a fast protruding belly while readying to sign numerous documents about Misio and fishi, as business trips and their expenses receipts are called in Citi he is joyous. 

Today is Friday which means the working day ends at 12pm upon which he will sign out and head straight to the watering hole in the official Suzuki Grande while the afternoon shift, otherwise dedicated to Siporo, will be spent chastising the new trends of Citi in private.The Grande is the new big man signature in terms of automobiles running the streets in Citi they replaced  Rengi Roveri and Renault. The latter wowed the crowds in years yonder. Life in the new Citi is a paradox!
The Suzukis now crowd the road leading to  Marutarama a suburb in Msingi wa Mji that hitherto had been a shrub but now was turned into a Malibu estates look alike.

But it is unfair not introduce the First Msope properly as it would rob you the understanding which is crucial in discerning why he is enjoying today so much. You see the First Msope was born in the Citi country side and never dreamed of big things as were happening in Msingi wa Mj currently. When he was a younger man, the authorities in Citi were uncouth, they mismanaged the country and got the Citimen as confused as an intoxicated homeless man. Citimen as a result hated each other so much that they unsuccessfully tried an apocalypse once. During this time the First Msope was starting out his teenage years. Problem is that some of the people in the authorities at that time were well known to the First Msope and in fact some of them might have been related to him by extension. Even at that time, all evidence pointed to him being a big man in the system one day.

In school the First Msope studied in a foreign language but this was to prove a disadvantage as the teachers were not very generous with their language so he only learnt the language partially. To compound the mess, that language was out of sync today and that is the reason that he was uncomfortable with some of the changes in Citi currently. He detested the new language and what it represented but the new language had also introduced him to the English premiership. 

The First Msope circled on Arsenal for the club managed by a Frenchman gave the First Msope a sense of identity as the lonely Frenchman in the English premiership. But in hindsight, Msope's newly found zealousness for soccer blessed the fortunes of the Citi national team in its hey days. The Citimen had even qualified for the continental bonanza, a fete that was hitherto unknown. The leading club in the land had also dominated regional tournaments and attracted the best players from all counties surrounding Citi though this did not stop the First Msope from going to Ship&Anchor to watch Arisenali instead of Siporo on friday afternoons.


As soon as the previous authorities in Citi were abolished the First Msope found out that the language he studied in school and managed to learn only partially was no-longer trendy. And so in order for him to flourish well today he had to learn another foreign language. This was particularly a difficult task at his age and big man status. 

But this new foreign language was essential in the economical and political dynamics of Citi, many language centres opened up all over Msingi wa Mji and other urban or commercial centres such that many, like the First Msope, would learn the new language and take advantage of newer opportunities in Citi. The language centres opened up in mosques, churches and markets.

He relied on his dexterity in farming on steep hills in the country to hustle in the new Citi. It did not help that all the new development programmes in Citi were compiled in a new vision and everything was written in the new foreign language. In order for the First Msope to climb the new big man ladders he found it necessary to learn this new language.

The language was further necessary because the new authorities had ensured that many new people arrived in Citi and they were not just visiting. They had come to stay and in order for the First Msope to get along with them he had to learn not just a new foreign language but new cultures. He was worried that the road rules were soon to be changed and that even his cherished friday Siporo would soon vanish.