Worn
out with the effort of speaking English all day, Jurgen trudged along the main street of
Belleville looking for a hotel. The sweat was dripping off his forehead on that
hot and humid August evening as he yanked his heavy suitcase with the broken
wheels along the sidewalk. It had been a long journey from Albania ending with
this tedious bus ride from Toronto. He was looking forward anxiously to
starting the Survey Technician program at Loyalist College, having finally
secured a student visa.
The first hotel
he tried was rowdy, now just a bar. The only other possibilities looked even
more run down than the first.
He stopped
a man on the street who was out walking his dog and in his halting English
asked where another hotel might be.
“Yeah, most
of our downtown hotels are just bars now. The only hotels we have are up near
the 401, several kilometres from here.”
His heart sank. The stranger must have sensed his dismay: “No idea if it’s still open,” he said, “but I know of a bed and breakfast not far from here.”
Hoping the handle of his now bedraggled
suitcase would make it a bit further, he plodded on to address he’d been given.
After knocking persistently, a tired looking lady answered with her husband
hovering close behind. Stepping politely back from the porch and summoning his
best English, he explained his plight. She listened attentively, said sorry,
but they were completely full. Seeing his disappointment, she took pity on him
and said they did have an air mattress he could use.
“What is
air mattress?” he asked dumbfounded, but happy to try it as the next step was
to spend the night in the bus station.
Tara
welcomed him in and hinted maybe he could take a shower while she and her
husband, Wayne, got things arranged. After a refreshing shower, they offered him
a simple meal which he devoured with zeal. Overwhelmed with his good fortune,
he promised them that one day he would repay their kindness.
“Oh no need
to do that, but in the future, just do the same for someone else,” said Wayne.
After dinner, Tara showed him to a room with a
lovely big bed. Too exhausted to ask further questions about the air mattress he
collapsed into that comfortable bed and fell instantly asleep. The waves of
loneliness that had been washing over him ever since he’d arrived, abated just
a little.
He stayed
with this family for a few days until his student accommodation became
available. Upon leaving, they invited him to return for Thanksgiving.
Jurgen Ismaili celebrating his Permanent Residency with his supervisor, Ontario Land Surveyor, Leslie Higginson |
“What is
Thanksgiving?” he asked, thrilled to be invited, no matter what. And for every
holiday since his arrival in Canada he has celebrated with this welcoming
family.
“Their kindness, huge for me. This Canada is good place to live,” he mused.
The following Easter when he was once again
with them, Tara told him about some renovations they had recently completed.
Upstairs they went to look at their lovely new ensuite which led off their
master bedroom.
“But this
is the room where I sleep that first night! Where you sleep that night?”
“I slept on
the couch,” she said.
“And your husband?”
“He slept
on the air mattress,” she said and smiled.
Bowled over
with their quiet, selfless generosity, he reached over and gave Tara a big hug.
Knowing he
had people who cared about him was wonderful but still life wasn’t easy. While
studying at Loyalist College he had to work two part-time jobs. Being a small
town, Belleville’s transit system was limited, and he had to walk home from his
job at Walmart which ended after the busses quit running. One night he slogged
home the six kilometres in a wicked snowstorm. Welcome to Canada indeed!
Money was
always a problem. International tuition fees of $17,000 had wiped out his
savings. At the end of first term with Christmas holidays approaching he had
exactly $3.68 left till next pay cheque on January 2. At Walmart he was able to
buy the leftover food for a cheap price. A bag of day-old buns and some cheese
spread for $1.50 helped the first night. Thankfully on Christmas and Boxing Day
he celebrated and feasted with his adopted Canadian family. Plus, Walmart had
given all employees a McDonald’s gift card and Jurgen got an extra one from a
vegetarian staffer who wasn’t into Big Macs. Often, it’s the little things that
make the difference.
After two years
he graduated from the Survey Technician course with honours and began working
on his certification as an Ontario Land Surveyor which involved completing several
university-level courses and formal training with a survey firm. English was
gradually getting easier, but the courses were getting a lot more challenging
and even more expensive. Another hurdle was getting credit for his previous
education in Albania where he had already achieved an Engineering Degree. Here
again he was graced by the kindness of administrators as he painstakingly
worked through this process.
As it
turned out, that summer he had a chance repay the kindness he had received as a
newcomer. He was thrilled to get a summer job in a survey company in Newmarket
and found a place to live without too much trouble. Another international
student had also been hired there that summer, and as they chatted, Jurgen found
out he was sleeping in his car as he could not find anywhere affordable to live.
Remembering Wayne’s words about paying it back when he could, he did not
hesitate to offer the couch in his apartment.
Immigrating
to Canada is no cakewalk and most people have no idea of the hurdles that must
be overcome for the successful transition to a new country. Jurgen is now a full-time
employee in my husband’s firm and is looking forward to applying for Canadian
citizenship next year.
“Then I can truly call myself a Canadian in law as well as in spirit,” he said with a grin.
***
Susan Chamberlain is a retired college
professor and former social worker. Since retirement she has pursued writing
courses and workshops and is thoroughly enjoying writing short essays and
memoirs. Some of her stories have been published in the Vista Magazine,
affiliated with the Seniors Association Kingston Region. She and her husband
live in Kingston and are enjoying their new job of grandparenting.
See Brian Henry’s upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend retreats here.
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