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New Pioneers Awards - 1996 |
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Award Winners |
Vincenzo Pietropaolo (Arts)
Vincenzo
was born in 1951 in Calabria, southern Italy. He immigrated with his
family to Canada when he was 12. In 1992, after a 17-year urban planning
career with the City of Toronto, which included dealing directly with many
immigrant communities, Vincenzo decided to follow his life-long dream to
dedicate himself to photography.
As a self-taught photographer, Vincenzo’s
first body of work was a social documentary on Italian immigrant life.
Through the camera he is a witness to individuals and groups overlooked by
history books. His most current work Harvest Pilgrims, documents migrant
farm workers who come to Canada from Mexico, Jamaica and the Eastern
Caribbean. His work has appeared nationally and internationally as feature
exhibits; in books and magazines; on television; and is collected by the
National Archives of Canada, the Canadian Museum of Contemporary
Photography and held in many private and corporate collections.
He is a
founding member of Photo Eclipse, and Silverlight, photo agencies devoted
to documentary photography. Vincenzo also shares his expertise with
students, community groups and unions, through the Artists in Schools and
Artists in the Workplace programs, teaching people to document their own
lives through photography.
Drago Harmic and Halil Fehmi (Entrepreneurship)
Drago
and Halil arrived in Canada from Croatia and Cyprus respectively with no
family or friends for support. Initially, Drago spoke no English and
attended night school. Both men were trained as toolmakers in their
homelands and found it difficult to secure employment with no Canadian
work experience.
In 1975, Drago began his own business which failed in the
first year due to lack of financial backing and business know-how, but led
him to complete a management program through Ryerson Polytechnical
University. In 1980, while working for the same company, Drago and Halil
formed a partnership and using their own personal savings and homes as
collateral, began manufacturing small precision springs.
Today, Dominion
Spring Industries Corporation is one of the most modernized spring
manufacturing facilities in North America and produces springs used
primarily in the automotive industry. They began with annual sales of
$60,000 and two employees (themselves). Today they have annual sales of
$12 million and the company employs 70 highly-skilled individuals,
representing 15 different nationalities. Based on their experiences as
newcomers, Drago and Halil employ those who cannot find jobs due to
difficulties with English or lack of Canadian experience. In conjunction
with the Peel Board of Education they offer English as a Second Language
(ESL) training and skills upgrading at the work site.
Ahmed Samater (Leadership)
Forced
to leave his family in a Somali refugee camp, Ahmed arrived in Canada in
January 1989. Although he spoke English, Ahmed faced many less obvious
cultural barriers. As a community activist and educator, Ahmed has worked
to bridge the cultural and practical gaps between the Somali community and
the wider community.
He created Midaynta (Association of Somali Service
Agencies) which helps to reunite Somali refugees with their families. He
also developed the Somali Family Support Centre in Flemingdon Park and a
housing guide booklet in Somali. To empower Somali women and children he
helped create the Somaliland Women’s Organization and the Somali Family
Re-unification Project. Ahmed has also created community events to involve
and educate both the Somali and wider community about the Somali culture.
At the national level, Ahmed represented the Somali community in a
precedent-setting constitutional challenge of the section of the
Immigration Act which requires that refugees produce a "satisfactory
identification" document, presumably from the countries they were fleeing,
to be granted "landed status". This work has far reaching implications in
improving conditions for refugee claimants in Canada.
Malgorzata Zywno (Science & Technology)
Educated
as an electrical engineer at the Technical University of Lodz in Poland,
Malgorzata faced gender discrimination as she sought an academic position.
She was also discriminated against because of her refusal to become a
member of the communist party or to work for the secret police. She left
Poland in 1981 and arrived in Canada as a government-sponsored refugee in
1982.
To fulfill her goal of a career in engineering education, Malgorzata
completed the Master of Engineering degree at the University of Toronto.
For the past 14 years, she has been teaching at Ryerson Polytechnic
University and has published several papers. Malgorzata served on the
Professional Engineers of Ontario (PEO) Task Force on Admissions
(1991-1993), which reviewed PEO’s procedures to ensure fair and equitable
treatment for all applicants to the engineering profession, regardless of
their country of origin, race or gender. She administers this philosophy
as a member of the PEO’s Academic Requirements Committee.
As an educator
and administrator, she has served as the Assistant Chair, Student Affairs,
in Ryerson’s department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and has
assisted students with academic and personal endeavors. She is involved in
the Women in Engineering Committee at Ryerson and works to improve the
climate for female engineering students to encourage young women to
consider a future in engineering through summer camp and mentorship
programs.
Kurnarasamy Nehru (SfC Graduate)
After
being arrested, detained and tortured for advocacy against human rights
abuses in his native Sri Lanka, Kumarasamy fled to India with his wife and
daughter. Separated from his wife when he left for Canada, they were
eventually reunited in 1989.
As a refugee, Kumarasamy was issued a work
permit but could not find employment. By chance he heard about Skills for
Change and enrolled in the CareerStart program, which provided computer
and work-search training for foreign-trained professionals and people with
accounting backgrounds. Following his graduation from this program,
Kumarasamy continued to volunteer with the organization and represented
graduates as a member of the board of directors.
Kumarasamy worked at
Skills For Change as a program assistant from 1992-1995. His work in the
community includes: serving on the board of directors at Bloor Information
and Legal Services; counseling other refugees through the Canadian Centre
for Victims of Torture; and work with two organizations to support and
promote the Tamil culture in Canada. Presently, Kumarasamy is studying
toward a BA in sociology at York University.
Mary Atputhakumar (Youth)
Mary
was 14 when her mother obtained a Minister’s Permit for the family to
leave Sri Lanka and apply for refugee status in Canada. She had limited
English and started school six days after arriving in Toronto. Facing
numerous cultural barriers, Mary learned English by reading books and
watching Polka Dot Door.
During her first years at Elmbank Middle School
in Toronto, Mary received the New Canadian Citizenship Award for her
contributions at school. As a high school student at Richview Collegiate
in Toronto, Mary has obtained honour standing every year. Mary is on the
track and field team, is president of the multicultural club, and is the
editor of the school year book.
As a leader in The Inner School Christian
Fellowship and member of the Anti-Racism Clubs at Richview, Mary fosters
awareness about the need for unity and cultural understanding among
students. Two mornings each week, Mary tutors children at the Braeburn
Center, which provides social and educational programs for children, youth
and their families. She also volunteers at the Etobicoke General Hospital
and with the Society of the Aid for Ceylon Minorities in Canada.
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Pioneers Home Page
Contact Us
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416 658-3101 ext. 214
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npa@skillsforchange.org
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Last updated
12/24/2007 |
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