Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Brrrrrrrr: Former Refugees Say Canadian Winters Can Be A Shock For Newcomers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Dec, 2015 01:46 PM
    REGINA — It was a frigid February in 1985 when Getachew Woldeyesus arrived in Saskatchewan as a refugee.
     
    The young man from Ethopia stayed inside for two months.
     
    "Because you don't know, is it slippery out there? Are you wearing the right shoes? It's freezing out there, so I was afraid to go out," Woldeyesus recalled in an interview with The Canadian Press.
     
    Weather-related challenges will no doubt face many of the 25,000 Syrian refugees the federal government has committed to bring to Canada by early next year. Social agencies, church groups and private citizens across the country have been organizing donations of clothing with an emphasis on coats, gloves, hats and winter footwear.
     
    Woldeyesus was 19 when he fled his home country in 1980 because of a civil war. He spent a few days in Sudan and a few years in Italy before finally being approved to resettle in Canada.
     
    It was difficult to leave his family behind and make the dangerous journey.
     
    When he finally got to Regina, Woldeyesus received support from the Regina Open Door Society. A volunteer mentor helped him get through the winter.
     
    "The volunteer was more encouraging and he was more supportive. He was always with me and trying to show me how to dress properly for winter. Also, Open Door provided a lot of information so, using that, I was able slowly to go out," said Woldeyesus, who is now the society's manager of settlement and family services.
     
     
    "The first winter was better. The second ... you started getting used to it. But of course it's shocking for the people to arrive in winter."
     
    Ali Abukar agrees.
     
    Abukar fled Somalia and lived in Egypt as a refugee before arriving in Canada in 2011. He lived in Ontario before moving to Saskatoon in the winter of 2013.
     
    Abukar said winter can be tough for refugees who use public transit and will stand outside waiting for a bus.
     
    "I think what also made it very difficult for me was the wind chill. The wind chill was making it worse. In Ontario, sometimes it gets colder and you see snow and all that, but it never gets colder the way that it gets here," he said.
     
    Abukar, who is now executive director at the Saskatoon Open Door Society, said sometimes refugees and immigrants don't know what clothes to wear in the winter. The society shows them what mittens and scarves are all about and how to dress for the cold.
     
    "We bring nurses or people who can talk about the problems that people can get exposed to if they don't dress properly," said Abukar.
     
    "And we even demonstrate how to dress up, how to put those extra layers to make sure that you don't have some of the wet parts of the weather sneak into your body, to make sure that you're not exposed to the cold weather when you're outside."
     
     
    Refugees arriving this winter may find the weather a bit more forgiving.
     
    A warming El Nino is forecast to bring milder conditions across much of Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Retailers Roll Out Online Deals For Cyber Monday, Expected To Rack Up Over $3 Billion In Sales

    Retailers Roll Out Online Deals For Cyber Monday, Expected To Rack Up Over $3 Billion In Sales
    NEW YORK — Retailers are rolling out online deals on so-called "Cyber Monday." But now that shoppers are online all the time anyway, the 10-year-old shopping holiday is losing some of its lustre.

    Retailers Roll Out Online Deals For Cyber Monday, Expected To Rack Up Over $3 Billion In Sales

    Walkable Neighbourhoods Dramatically Lower Odds Of Obesity: Research

    Walkable Neighbourhoods Dramatically Lower Odds Of Obesity: Research
    Those findings come out of a study conducted by researcher Salman Klar of the Fraser Health Authority and presented at this week's World Diabetes Congress in Vancouver.

    Walkable Neighbourhoods Dramatically Lower Odds Of Obesity: Research

    Dror Bar-Natan Renounces Oath To The Queen Right After Becoming Canadian Citizen

    Dror Bar-Natan Renounces Oath To The Queen Right After Becoming Canadian Citizen
    Dror Bar-Natan, a 49-year-old math professor from Israel, was one of three permanent residents who challenged the constitutionality of making citizenship conditional on the pledge to the Queen, her heirs and successors.

    Dror Bar-Natan Renounces Oath To The Queen Right After Becoming Canadian Citizen

    Bodies Of Man, Woman And Teen Found In Their Home Near Edson, Alta.

    Bodies Of Man, Woman And Teen Found In Their Home Near Edson, Alta.
    Mounties say they found the bodies of a man, a woman and teenage girl in the house near Edson on Sunday.

    Bodies Of Man, Woman And Teen Found In Their Home Near Edson, Alta.

    Not Everyone Succumbs To The Tech Industry's Upgrade-Your-Phone Siren Call

    Not Everyone Succumbs To The Tech Industry's Upgrade-Your-Phone Siren Call
    Between splashy launches, lavish new-phone offers (get a free HDTV on activation!) and frequent software updates that slow down your old handset, it sometimes feels like the entire technology industry is pushing you to buy the latest smartphone.

    Not Everyone Succumbs To The Tech Industry's Upgrade-Your-Phone Siren Call

    Man Charged With Murder Of Missing Woman Told Saskatoon Police Where To Find Body

    Man Charged With Murder Of Missing Woman Told Saskatoon Police Where To Find Body
    SASKATOON — Investigators say a man charged with killing a woman who vanished five years ago walked into a Saskatoon police station and told them where to find her body.

    Man Charged With Murder Of Missing Woman Told Saskatoon Police Where To Find Body