Tag Archive | "Ethiopia"

The Jolie-Pitt Family

November is Adoption Awareness Month

 

Will, Susie and Abdu Photo by Keri Coles

Will, Susie and Abdu Photo by Keri Coles

Unexpected Gifts

By Susie : Four years into our marriage, my husband, Will, and I suddenly wanted nothing more than to become parents.

Neither of us had a particular desire to have children who looked like us, so the fact that there are millions of kids in the world in need of families prompted us to look into adoption.

Little did we suspect what a life-changing journey we were embarking on.

Two long years after signing our local adoption agency’s application form, we were handed our beautiful infant son in the sitting room of a transition home in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Abdu was a very energetic and happy child, and was simply thrilled to have two adults lavishing attention on him all day long.

He immediately began attaching to us, and we to him. Like it is for most new parents, the transition into parenthood was rewarding but hard. The lack of sleep and nonstop activity left us more exhausted than we’d ever been before. But at the end of each day as we stood and watched our son sleep, Will and I also felt happier than we’d ever been before.

As the three of us became more confident in our new roles and routines, Will and I realized that raising Abdu would not be the same as raising a biological child would have been. Our little family was now one third Ethiopian, and our family culture would need to reflect that. But a strong Ethiopian- Canadian identity is not something we could give Abdu on our own. Luckily I had a good friend who is Ethiopian, and she often invited us into her home.

Over traditional Ethiopian coffee she introduced us to Ethiopian families who had children Abdu’s age.

In addition, we looked for a part-time caregiver who was Ethiopian. And so, a year after arriving in Canada, Abdu began to spend two days a week with a wonderful Ethiopian woman who fed him Ethiopian food, spoke to him in Amharic, put him to sleep by carrying him on her back, and just simply loved him like he was her own.

Incorporating a new culture into our family routine has enriched our lives in so many ways.

The many new friends we’ve made, both within the Ethiopian community and within the adoption community, would likely never have come into our lives had we not adopted Abdu. The food, celebrations, art, music, literature and rich history of Ethiopia are all things that Abdu has brought into our lives.

www.choicesadoption.ca / 250.479.9811

The Jolie-Pitt Family

The Jolie-Pitt Family

November is Adoption Awareness Month

By Holly Allen : CHOICES Adoption is happy to celebrate adoption this month with families and the community. Adoption awareness month is a wonderful time to celebrate adoption locally and internationally. While we know children wait for families around the globe there are over 1200 children who wait for families in BC. Adoption continues to be an extraordinary way to create your family. CHOICES is excited to be out in the community celebrating adoption. We will be walking in the Santa Clause Parade in Victoria, sharing stories with families, decorating a tree at the Festival of Trees and fundraising with a Krispy Kreme donut drive. This month I have decided to choose an adoption story, “Bean Trees” for my book club. How will you celebrate adoption this November? Our Executive Director, Cheryl Fix and all of us at CHOICES want to wish you a happy November. Adoption awareness month has been a part of the community for over 30 years. View the North American Council on Adoptable Children for more information on the history of adoption awareness month: http://www.nacac.org/

Here are a few facts about adoption: there are currently more boys than girls in foster care in BC waiting for a permanent family.

One in three people are connected by adoption. You are never too old to be adopted. Find out more about adoption by visiting our website: www.choicesadoption.ca

November 27, 2011 CHOICES has a free information session at the Vancouver English Centre (250 Smithe Street) from 2pm to 4pm.

Call CHOICES to register 1 888 479 9811. For a free information package email choices@choicesadoption.ca  www.choicesadoption.ca

 

 

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Elsa Piassa Owner of Elsa's Piassa Haidressing Salon Vancouver BC Phot By KMG

‘Family Love’ Elsa Piassa

Elsa Piassa Owner of Elsa's Piassa Haidressing Salon Vancouver BC Phot By KMG

Elsa Piassa Owner of Elsa's Piassa Haidressing Salon Vancouver BC Phot By KMG

By Ryan Andrew Mitchell The Afro News Vancouver

In 1989, Elsa Piassa moved into the City of Vancouver. Living in a new town could be intimidating, but she did not let that break her confidence. She entered the Déjà Vu International School of Cosmetology, the first of its’ kind in Vancouver. When she unpacked her bags, she was unaware of the impending love and aid that was waiting for her.

Not certain of where to start, Elsa knew that she needed a place to call home, and guidance to encourage her. She was introduced to the Cross family and they quickly became her support system. She states “I met them through a friend, when I started working here. They were the first family I met in Vancouver; Anthony, Lukas, and the Mother, Delores Cross. Being in a new city, one can feel lonely but, having a family can ease that [feeling].”

Elsa had an innate passion for her career “I had always loved to make people look beautiful. Now I can put that to work here, that is what I love about the salon.” Piassa is not only her last name, but also the name of her birth place. “There is a little town in Ethiopia called Piassa where I grew up. I wanted to name the salon after my home.”

The Mother of the family, Deloris Cross, had a salon of her own. Cross was Elsa’s mentor and gave her the stepping stones in management and hair treatment, before Elsa graduated and studied advance training in North Carolina. “She helped me a lot; in fact she is a lot like my Mom!” Mrs. Cross introduced her to the business side of hairstyling. Once Piassa knew the in and outs of owning a salon she pursued her dream. “Deloris Cross taught me how to do hair.” Elsa admits if it wasn’t for the aid of the Cross family, especially Mrs. Cross, She wouldn’t have thought about opening her own business. “I’m in my position all because of the Cross Family.” Elsa is the mother of two twin boys Nathaneil and Romel aged seven. She comments that she got double what she bargained for. “I always wanted one boy, but then God gave me two, so that is a great blessing!” She looks forward to supporting and mentoring her own children. “I wish to keep the same business, and keep working in hairstyle, but most of all; I want to raise my kids.” She did not let fear overcome her when she was opening up her shop, and she welcomes young Mothers to pursue their potentials. “If you like to do something or have a passion… go for it, I’m [the type of person] who likes to take risks. [Back then] I really didn’t know if I would make it or not, but I then I would say ‘why not? If it works out well, that is great, if not, that is OK.”

Elsa states the need for everyone, especially young women to find a support system. “It is hard trying to manage a business and being a single Mother, but I have a lot of heart because of great friends and family. That is why I made it; I have a lot of help.” She admits that Deloris is one of the biggest anchors in her life, and she states that she is grateful for the building blocks Elsa used to construct her business. “She is like my Mother back home, and I will always see her as my Mother.

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The Black History on Salt Spring Island

 "Students at Salt Spring's Central School, 1929,  courtesy of Salt Spring Archives."

"Students at Salt Spring's Central School, 1929, courtesy of Salt Spring Archives."

Evelyn C. White The Afro News Salt Spring Island

With the blockbuster success of his book Roots (1976) and the subsequent television miniseries, author Alex Haley tapped into a deep longing among the descendants of enslaved blacks to claim ties with our African forebears. It was my understanding of this history that prompted me to burst into tears when I recently accessed my e-mail and found an image of a beaming man in Lesotho holding a copy of my book, Every Goodbye Ain’t Gone: A Photo Narrative of Black Heritage on Salt Spring Island (EGAG).

The book was opened to a page featuring a photo of the man’s daughter Tankiso, age 5, shortly after she’d arrived on Salt Spring last May to begin a new life with her adoptive family. I’m not privy to the circumstances that led to the separation of birth parent and child. But it was clear from the father’s radiant smile that his bond with his daughter now in Canada would endure.

For me, the arrival of the photo from Lesotho marked the culmination of a three-year journey I’d spent documenting the historical and contemporary presence of blacks on Salt Spring. Having toiled a decade on a biography of Alice Walker (best known for her novel The Color Purple), I had not intended to begin another major writing project when I moved to Salt Spring from the San Francisco Bay area. But one day, in 2006, I was standing in my living room when a cosmic voice exhorted me to write a book about the black heritage on Salt Spring.

Over the years, I’ve learned to honour the spiritual guidance that I believe is available to all who heed its call. And so, working with local photographer Joanne Bealy, I began the task of producing the first book to focus exclusively on Salt Spring’s 150-year black heritage and to examine its unique racial history through a 21st century lens. See www.dancingcrowpress.com

The ancestral home of the Coast Salish people, Salt Spring welcomed its first black settlers in 1859. Literate and highly accomplished, the free blacks had fled Northern California after the enactment of a series of racially repressive laws that threatened their hard-won freedom. Interestingly, the disaffected blacks in California were seeking refuge at the same time that B.C. provincial governor James Douglas (himself the son of a black woman born in Barbados) was in need of skilled labourers to support the boom town frenzy after gold was discovered along the Fraser River. A core group of the blacks that had first landed in Victoria later migrated to Salt Spring.

The early blacks on Salt Spring included the community’s first teacher, John Craven Jones. A college graduate trained in Greek and Latin, Jones taught the youth on Salt Spring (without pay) for several years. As one who was educated (K-9) by a coterie of dedicated black teachers, my research on Jones was especially uplifting. And who could look at a 1929 class photo from Salt Spring and not marvel at the ethnic diversity of the students?

The force behind Salt Spring’s first public recreation site, Jim Anderson was another early black pioneer. An archival photo finds him in the company of a black youth in a canoe. Here’s a reflection I was thrilled to include in EGAG: “Most people find it tiresome to have to sweep their back porch but Jim Anderson made a hobby of keeping his beach clean and he was down there every morning [with a broom]. This was [Anderson’s] little park and he delighted in having people … come down for picnics.”

The boy in the photo was a member of the Whims family, also among the black pioneers. Born on Salt Spring, octogenarian Bobby Wood is related, on his maternal side, to the Whims clan. A dapper gentleman with a quiet demeanor, Wood enjoys fishing and the Calgary Stampede.

Long attractive to retirees, Salt Spring is also awash with children. The youthful ranks include many children of African descent such as Calla Ann Amma Adubofour-Poko whose father is Ghanaian. Like Tankiso, Ethiopia-born Selamu and Dexter Patterson were adopted by white families on Salt Spring. “The story of the early African American settlers is deeply moving for us,” said Shauna Klem, who is pictured in EGAG with her sons. “ Everyone has embraced the boys so enthusiastically.”

Given Salt Spring’s status as one of the top artist colonies in North America, it was especially rewarding for me, as an author, to profile black artists on the island. Born in Kenya, Sav Boro is an acclaimed muralist and painter of wildlife and landscapes. The daughter of a Moroccan musician father and a teacher mother of French, Egyptian and Tunisian heritage, Yasmine Amal is a skilled potter who sells her wares at Salt Spring’s renowned Saturday Market.

As the world turns to B.C. because of the Vancouver Winter Olympics, I’m elated to have “answered the call” to create a book that celebrates the compelling black history of Canada. Photographer Joanne Bealy and I will sign and discuss Every Goodbye Ain’t Gone at 7 p.m. on Friday, February 5 at the Rhizome Café, 317 East Broadway in Vancouver. We’ll also do a presentation at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 24 at the central Vancouver Public Library, 350 West Georgia Street. Both events are free and open to the public.

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Building a School in Duk Padiet, South Sudan

David Schroeder  The Afro International

Jacob Deng Building a School in Duk Padiet, South Sudan

Jacob Deng Building a School in Duk Padiet, South Sudan

As a seven-year-old boy Jacob Deng fled his village in southern Sudan, Duk Padiet, in the province of Jonglei, narrowly escaping the death and destruction brought by militias from the north. The trek was a harrowing journey first to Ethiopia, and then back through Sudan to a massive refugee camp in Kenya called Kakuma. As one of the Lost Boys of Sudan, he lived in Kakuma for over a decade. Realizing the need for an education, Jacob used his entrepreneurial skills to get to a boarding school in Kenya, and later made arrangements to come to Canada as a refugee. He has lived in Halifax since 2003 with his wife Jenty and their two young boys.

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A true advocate for mankind

Written by Alexander Nkrumah

clement_apaakIn between writing his PhD dissertation, being an archaeology instructor and hosting a show on CJSF 90.1 FM, Clement Abas Apaak managed to get elected as president of the Simon Fraser Student Society in 2005. He has agreed to be Student Convocation Speaker at the upcoming ceremony in June.

“I actually ran my campaign from Ethiopia. I was in Africa on field work and for some reason I chose to run for president.” Apaak acknowledged this in a 2006 interview with The Peak, an Independent Student Newspaper at Simon Fraser University.

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