World Refugee Day

June 20 marks World Refugee Day, an international day designated by the United Nations to honour refugees around the globe and celebrates the strength and courage of those who have been forced to flee their home countries to escape war, conflict or persecution. World Refugee Day is an opportunity to build empathy and understanding for the plight of refugees and recognize their resilience as they aim to rebuild their lives.

Wilfrid Laurier University is a thriving community where all members can reach their potential. Together with our many campus and community partners, Laurier creates access to innovative opportunities for refugees seeking safety and education while building toward a brighter future.

Global Partners

Laurier works with partner organizations around the world to identify and create opportunities for refugee students and scholars to access academic opportunities.

wusc-student-spotlight.jpg

World University Service Canada Refugee Program

For over 40 years, the World University Service of Canada (WUSC) Student Refugee Program has combined resettlement with opportunities for higher education for student refugees. The WUSC program at Laurier began in 1985, with the first refugee students arriving in 1991.

Through the Laurier WUSC Laurier Scholarship, refugee students receive support to cover tuition and living expenses for four years. The scholarship is funded by an $8 annual student levy, the Office of the President and the Wilfrid Laurier University Faculty Association. The WUSC student committee, which operates at Laurier’s Brantford and Waterloo campuses, provides peer support to help refugee students acclimate to their life and studies at Laurier.

Read more stories about the WUSC program at Laurier.

WUSC Brantford student president advocating for the rights of refugees

As the president of Laurier's student WUSC club at the Brantford campus, student Stellah Nikuze is bringing awareness to refugees' needs and challenges. One of WUSC’s signature programs is the Student Refugee Program, which provides a life-changing scholarship for refugee youth to study at a Canadian university. Laurier is a partner of WUSC’s Student Refugee Program.

stellah-nikuze-sl.png

“When I came to Laurier I felt safe and free. I have had professors that helped me succeed. I have been given so many opportunities.”

– Dammee Sero (BA '17)

International Students Overcoming War Scholarships

International Students Overcoming War (ISOW) is a student-led and student-run initiative at Laurier that works with partner organizations to bring students experiencing conflict in their home countries to study at Laurier on scholarship. 

Scholarships are funded by a $4-per-term student levy and support from partner organizations, including Daughters for Life, Jusoor Syria, the Iraqi-Syrian Student Project and Prospect Burma.

Since 2015, ISOW has supported 23 scholars from Syria, Gaza, Lebanon, Egypt and Myanmar. Six new ISOW scholars will join the Laurier community and begin their studies in the fall 2022 term.

Read more stories about ISOW at Laurier.

“ISOW is different, it's so much more than a scholarship opportunity. ISOW is a network of kind and caring people who knew our situation. We didn't have to advocate for ourselves continuously because they made us feel that our time at Laurier was going to be great. And it was.”

– Meera Tawil (BBA '20)

World Education Services Gateway Program

Laurier is a referral partner for the World Education Services Gateway Program (WESGP), which assesses the educational credentials of those who have been displaced and have limited proof of their academic achievements. Working with WESGP, Laurier’s admissions team is prioritizing undergraduate applications from those fleeing Afghanistan as a result of the crisis that unfolded in August 2021.

Laurier, in partnership with student leaders from ISOW, is also in contact with Women Leaders of Tomorrow, a non-profit organization that advocates for education and sports for Afghan youth, to sponsor female students from Afghanistan.

Scholars at Risk Network

Laurier is a member of Scholars at Risk (SAR), an international network of institutions and individuals who aim to protect scholars experiencing conflict and threats in their home countries and promote academic freedom.

Laurier offers the Visiting Research-Scholars at Risk program, an online offering that allows scholars at risk to re-enter and re-engage with academia at Laurier. The program also assists Laurier faculty and students to create and strengthen opportunities for research and collaboration with scholars in areas of mutual interest. Scholars eligible for this program will have a Visiting Researcher appointment at Laurier.

Contact research@wlu.ca to learn more about the Visiting Research Scholars program at Laurier.

Local Initiatives

Wilkes House in Brantford

Housing in Brantford for Ukrainian Families

In spring 2022, Laurier worked with the City of Brantford, YMCA Immigrant Settlement Services Brantford and the Slavic Full Gospel Church in Brantford to support Ukrainian refugees arriving in Brant as a result of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Three Ukrainian families resided at Wilkes House, an apartment-style residence building at Laurier’s Brantford campus. The families, who arrived in May, remained at Wilkes House until more permanent housing is secured through the YMCA, later that summer.

Laurier also provided storage space at One Market for household items donated by the community to assist Ukrainian families once they settled into permanent housing.

Group of students wearing Laurier Helps Ukraine t-shirts.

Laurier Students Form Laurier Helps Ukraine Club

In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a new Students’ Union club, Laurier Helps Ukraine, formed to provide humanitarian assistance for refugees affected by the war through fundraising and awareness initiatives.

To date, Laurier Helps Ukraine has raised $3,000 with most of the funds – $2,200 – donated to the Canadian-Ukrainian Foundation and Help Us Help. The Ukrainian Orthodox Church of St. Sophia in Waterloo also received a donation to their medical-supply fundraiser.

Laurier Helps Ukraine hopes to fundraise through events held during the summer months. Follow the club on Instagram to learn more.

“We are feeling the love from the Laurier community during this difficult time.”

— Laurier student Sofiya Bezruchko

Sponsoring Syrian Families

Moved by the plight of those impacted by the civil war in Syria, the Laurier community was driven to act. In November 2015, Laurier partnered with the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) to sponsor and resettle Syrian refugee families who fled as a result of their country seeking safety. Two families settled in Kitchener-Waterloo while the other settled in Brantford.

The Brantford family was separated from their daughter, her husband and their young son. Eventually, after many months of effort, Laurier was also able to sponsor that family as well. In 2019 they arrived, were reunited with their extended family members, and also settled in Brantford.

MCC, a highly regarded organization working in the field of refugee settlement, provided advice and guidance to the families, while Laurier and Citizenship and Immigration Canada engaged in a blended-sponsorship arrangement to provide financial support. Laurier faculty and staff members at both campuses volunteered their time to assist with the resettlement efforts and helping the newcomer families navigate life in their new country.

Shortly after announcing the sponsorship initiative, the Laurier community raised more than $21,000 of the $27,000 required to support one family of four. Many Laurier employees contributed to the sponsorship initiative through a payroll deduction program.

Since their arrival in late 2015, members of the Laurier-sponsored Syrian families have learned English, secured employment, started school and purchased a home.

New Scholarship Opportunity with Refugee-Claimant Youth

Laurier and its ISOW club have entered a five-year partnership with COMPASS Refugee Centre, a resettlement organization in Kitchener, Ont., to offer the ISOW Newcomer Scholarship Program. The scholarship program assists up to two recipients per academic year with undergraduate tuition fees in any Laurier program and is renewable if eligibility criteria – including refugee-claimant status and financial need – are met.

The scholarship is designed to offset financial barriers that academically eligible refugee-claimant youth in Canada face. Refugee-claimants – sometimes referred to as asylum seekers – would be considered international students and ineligible for tuition assistance through government programs. International student tuition fees can make education inaccessible for most refugee-claimant youth.

Laurier will welcome the first Newcomer Scholarship Program recipient, a female student from Turkey, to the Faculty of Science at the Waterloo campus this fall. She will be joined by six international students beginning their academic journeys at Laurier with ISOW scholarship support.

Research

Laurier's International Migration Research Centre (IMRC) fosters research, debate and policy analysis regarding migration and mobility issues such as human security and migrant rights.

Displacement: Laurier research helping refugees of climate change and war

International migration is a key focus for many Laurier researchers, examining the policies and human rights associated with displacement.

Bree Akesson has travelled to refugee camps all over the world to speak to families who are forced to flee their homes due to conflict. Robert McLeman focuses on the human dimensions of environmental change, including climate migration.

Through their #InspiredResearch, they are motivating urgent global responses to climate change and human displacement.

Conversation with the author: Alison Mountz

On IMRC's podcast, Displacements, Alison Mountz, Laurier Research Chair in Global Migration, and Kim Rygiel, associate professor in Laurier’s Department of Political Science and at the Balsillie School of International Affairs, talk to authors, activists, scholars and creatives who are engaging with issues of human displacement. The co-hosts discussed Mountz's book The Death of Asylum: Hidden Geographies of the Enforcement Archipelago on the first episode.

allison-mountz.jpg

A National Project: Syrian Refugee Resettlement in Canada

Margaret Walton-Roberts, professor of Geography and Environmental Studies, co-edited A National Project: Syrian Refugee Resettlement in Canada, which provides a detailed examination of the experiences of refugees and receiving communities during Canada's Operation Syrian Refugee from 2015 to 2016.