Calgary

Calgary family forgoes kitchen renos to sponsor Syrian refugees

Neena Hardman has been looking forward to a brand new kitchen for a while now, but recently decided with her husband Kirk to put the roughly $5,000 they had allocated for the renos, towards the cost of sponsoring a family fleeing the violence and turmoil of Syria.

“It's a beautiful feeling … I can't wait,” says Neena Hardman

Calgary family puts kitchen reno money towards Syrian refugees

9 years ago
Duration 2:11
A new sink will have to wait. One Calgary family is putting $5,000 in reno money towards sponsoring Syrian refugees

Neena Hardman has been looking forward to a brand new kitchen for a while now, but recently decided with her husband Kirk to put the roughly $5,000 they had allocated for the renos, towards the cost of sponsoring a family fleeing the violence and turmoil of Syria.

"I just wanted to have a little space, right?" Hardman explained, looking at renovations planned for her northeast home.

Neena Hardman is giving up her dream kitchen to give the funds to sponsor a family of Syrian refugees. (CBC)

"Replace the counters and cupboards. It's old, right?" she said.

But after conversations with her husband Kirk, the Hardmans decided to pool the new kitchen money with others, to fund the cost of bringing a Syrian refugee family to Calgary.

It's about $20,000 to $30,000 to bring and settle one family for a year.

The Hardmans $5,000 will be put with other sponsorship money under a federal government program called Groups of five.

Hardman's husband said it's the right thing to do.

Kirk Hardman says sponsoring a Syrian family of refugees instead of redoing his kitchen, is the right thing to do. (CBC)

"To give somebody else an opportunity … to come to Canada is important for us, you know it's just one of the things you sacrifice and go, 'Yeah, it's not a big deal,'" Kirk Hardman said.

For Neena though, it's about doing a reality check on what is important.

Neena and Kirk Hardman are putting $5,000 allocated for kitchen renos, towards sponsoring a Syrian refugee family. (CBC)

"These things don't matter. A granite top, it's just material, it doesn't really matter," she said.

"There's actual living beings that are suffering right now that don't have the bare necessities, they don't have food, they don't have water, they're living in tents. So, this is not important."

Nothing's carved in stone yet, but the Hardmans have a family they would like to sponsor already.

It's a couple, the man is an English-speaking professional and the woman is pregnant, and expecting any day now.

"And to be able to give that child this beautiful country and not to have to worry about getting bombarded…" Hardman said, pausing.

"It's a beautiful feeling. I can't wait."