“I felt safe and I felt welcome”

Name: 
Rosarina Saw
Graduation Year: 
2005 (PC30)
Burma

It has been nearly a decade since I left a refugee camp in Northern Thailand to accept a scholarship to Pearson College.  I arrived late and found myself in a new and often confusing world.

When I first arrived everyone was speaking English perfectly. I did not know English and at first it was the toughest time of my life. I was worried. However,  I soon found that everyone welcomed me and everyone was nice and friendly.  Even though we all came from different countries we became like brothers and sisters.  I learned so much there – treating people equally, understanding one another and loving one another. I felt safe and I felt welcome.

Winning the scholarship also gave me the opportunity to become a Canadian citizen. After I left Pearson I moved to Vancouver and became a licensed practical nurse. I also became very involved with the Karen community (my people). Today I am a fulltime community worker for a government run program supporting refugees, and I help them settle into their new homes and new lives in Canada.

I first went to the refugee camp in Thailand when I was about five. My parents had given me to relatives who were fleeing from the turmoil of my home town in Burma.  It is now 20 years since I had contact with my birth family.  At last, in December 2009, I was able to fly to Thailand as a Canadian citizen.  From Bangkok, friends and I made our way to the camp in which I grew up. Then, walking through the jungle (at night so we would not be discovered) I was finally able to meet my parents, my siblings and my nieces and nephews.  It was a very emotional experience for all of us.

I look forward to helping improve my family’s life in Burma and returning there again to visit them and once again experience the things I still miss – like eating native fruits and drinking fresh coconut milk.