Race and Refugees: How Refugees Learn About Race in America
By Yumeka Kawahara, Lucy Mastellar, Sarah Rose Morehouse, Charlie Williams, Dr. Karen Jacobsen Refugees in Towns is proud to release
Read MoreBy Yumeka Kawahara, Lucy Mastellar, Sarah Rose Morehouse, Charlie Williams, Dr. Karen Jacobsen Refugees in Towns is proud to release
Read MoreThis article was originally published by NewCities on October 25, 2022 as part of its quarterly editorial series, The Big
Read MoreA side hustler juggles multiple part-time jobs to weather financial storms By Marisol Hernandez, Heather Odell, Shane Sullivan, Rosemary Ventura,
Read MoreJayshree Venkatesan (F20) is the Director of Research at the Center for Financial Inclusion. She reflects on CFI’s annual Financial Inclusion
Read MoreBy Barnabas Ticha Muvhuti Here in South Africa, I am one of approximately 180,000 holders of the Zimbabwe Exemption Permit
Read MoreBy Felix Tapilira Chilumpha Unlike in neighboring South Africa where refugees are free to mix with the general population as
Read MoreBy Karen Jacobsen and Kim Wilson One of the biggest challenges facing refugees and migrants is navigating the livelihoods and
Read MoreBy Kim Wilson.
“I have twelve children of my own, but after the war, I ended up with twenty-one children in my care.” This is the story of Nyaring, who fled South Sudan for Kampala in 2015 . Nyaring and her husband’s two other wives looked after their many children.
“He had three plots of land, so we [the wives] each lived on a plot, and our children would fetch water, cut grass, and clean houses and we survived on that money.” There, life was peaceful. “When my husband died, we all separated. He was a known person for working with activists and he was targeted and killed.”
Though Nyaring’s departure was frantic, her destination was clear — Kampala to Bishop Munde. The Bishop had become a beacon for so many and had grown famous for his generosity. From there, she would get her bearings and make her next steps.
Like others fleeing South Sudan, Nyaring’s start in Kampala was a desperate one. The oldest child in her care was eighteen and the youngest was five. Not only did the bishop provide shelter, but he paid for school fees as much as he was able.
Her story is similar to many other refugees’ whose financial and economic journeys started with help from friends, a place of worship, or friendly police.
Read MoreThe Conversation published an article by Leir Institute Director Professor Katrina Burgess. Drawing on her own migration expertise and observations
Read MoreBy Dr. Nahid Bhadelia and Ian Johnstone, from the Geneva Workshop on Tuesday, 27 November 2018
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