Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

From Zaatari To Ottawa: Young Refugee And Minister Reunite Over Painting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jun, 2016 11:40 AM
    OTTAWA — Federal politicians meet a lot of people, but Syrian children don't meet a lot of federal politicians — let alone the same one twice, in two different countries, each a world apart from the other.
     
    Hamza Ali, 13, remembers clearly the day last November when a trio of Canadian cabinet ministers trooped into an ad-hoc art gallery set up in the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan.
     
    Ali, one of the artists, shook the ministers' hands and explained the concept behind his gripping paintings of women and men struggling with life and the war in Syria.
     
    Immigration Minister John McCallum told Ali he was struck by the symbolism of a painting showing a woman carrying a map of Syria on her back up a flight of stairs, a heavy red sky in the background.
     
    "Women do all the heavy lifting," McCallum remarked.
     
    That painting now hangs in Health Minister Jane Philpott's office in Ottawa. McCallum didn't have one — until Monday.
     
    The ministers left the camp and went on to open a massive refugee processing centre near Amman that would eventually see thousands of refugees interviewed and screened to come to Canada.
     
    Five of them ended up being the Ali family.
     
    Since February, they've lived in the national capital — Hamza utterly oblivious to the fact  his painting was hanging in a high-powered government office just a few minutes away.
     
    When his family was invited Monday to an event in Ottawa to mark World Refugee Day, he and his father decided to paint another.
     
    The idea, they said through a translator, was to offer a thank you to the minister who may not have bought one of the paintings but — unbeknownst to the minister — had given them the gift of a new life in Canada.
     
    When McCallum arrived at the event, he was guided over to the Alis.
     
    He nodded when he was told he'd met them before, but then Ali's mother reminded him her son had been the boy with the paintings in the camp.  McCallum's face lit up — and his smile grew even wider when Ali's father pulled a new painting out of a paper bag.
     
    It was a portrait of the minister, a Canadian flag behind him and the words "thank you very much" across the top.
     
     
    McCallum said he was caught off guard by the gesture. "Having met them in both places, it is great to see the fruits of our labour." 
     
    The day they met the ministers, the Alis didn't know they would later come to Canada. Hamza had been chosen to meet them because camp officials had wanted to showcase the programs they were running for children, some with Canadian funds. 
     
    Today, all three of the Ali children are enrolled in school in Ottawa and learning English, as are their parents. But art remains an important part of their family.  They have a room in their apartment just for their supplies. 
     
    Hamza is at work on a painting of an Arabian horse and his father recently painted one of a Syrian girl and Canadian girl wrapped in an embrace, their hands around a Canadian flag.
     
    "Before, all our work was sorrowful," Hamza's father Mohammad Ali said, partly in broken English and partly through a translator.
     
    "Now we've started painting happy things."
     
    On Monday, the United Nations' Refugee Agency released its annual report on the state of the world's displaced people.
     
    The agency said by the end of last year, 65.3 million people had been forcibly displaced from their homes, about 12.4 million of them newly displaced, due to ongoing persecution, conflict, generalized violence, or human rights violations that continue to plague countries around the world.
     
    Only a fraction were resettled around the world. Canada admitted around 32,000 refugees in all of 2015 through a combination of resettlement and grants of asylum to those already here.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News
    OTTAWA — Canada's broadcast regulator is forcing English-language TV stations to air at least seven hours a week of local news, and creating a new fund to help the smaller ones pay for it as part of a "rebalancing" of the country's television landscape.

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

    Cape Breton University Soccer Player Banned From Play After Drug Violation

    OTTAWA — An elite soccer player from Cape Breton has been banned from the game for 18 months after admitting to taking a prohibited substance last year.

    Cape Breton University Soccer Player Banned From Play After Drug Violation

    Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans

    Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans
    Canadian companies are cashing in on so-called anti-Trumpism in the United States, offering our neighbours to the south an escape plan should Donald Trump win the presidential election in November.

    Canadian Brands Cashing In On 'Anti-Trumpism' To Appeal To Americans

    $85m Grant For Chrysler Not Corporate Welfare, Wynne Says

      Wynne made the announcement today at the Fiat Chrysler Automotive Research and Development Centre in Windsor.

    $85m Grant For Chrysler Not Corporate Welfare, Wynne Says

    Manitoba Legislature Could See Gender-Neutral Washrooms: Premier

    Manitoba Legislature Could See Gender-Neutral Washrooms: Premier
    Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister, a Progressive Conservative long accused by his NDP opponents of being homophobic, said Tuesday he is considering a request to have a gender-neutral public washroom in the legislature.

    Manitoba Legislature Could See Gender-Neutral Washrooms: Premier

    RCMP Investigating 3 Sex Assault Allegations Against Male Student: SFU

    RCMP Investigating 3 Sex Assault Allegations Against Male Student: SFU
    Male student who is the subject of the allegations is not on campus, but he did not say if he was suspended or expelled.

    RCMP Investigating 3 Sex Assault Allegations Against Male Student: SFU