Toronto

Syrian refugee family in Toronto grateful for Canadian welcome

The Garabedian family is happy to be safe in Canada four months after landing on the first plane carrying Syrian refugees to come to the country.

Father said his dream is for his children to attend university in Canada

Syrian refugee family's first 5 months in Canada

9 years ago
Duration 5:17
'People are very generous and compassionate and willing to help us...wherever we go we see that Canadian smile,' Vanig Garabedian says

Four months after they landed at Toronto's Pearson airport as part of the Liberal government's pledge to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees here, one family says they're grateful for the generosity they've received from Canadians since. 

Vanig Garabedian and his wife, Anjilik, worked as doctors in Syria for 13 years but eventually fled the violence in the Syrian city of Aleppo along with their three children. Now, a Canadian flag sticks out of a flower pot in the Garabedians' living room and Garabedian said he's already hoping his kids will go to university in this country some day.

Garabedian said since his family arrived along with 200 other refugees, they've received warm greetings wherever they go. 

"Wherever we go we see that Canadian smile," Garabedian told CBC News.

"People are very generous and compassionate and willing to help us." 

There will be challenges ahead, Garabedian said. He said he thinks it will be difficult for him and his wife to find work in their professional field.

His children, 12-year-old twins Sylvie and Lucie and 11-year-old Anna-Maria, however, have already settled into new schools.

"The kids know they are safe and accepted by everybody and they are happy in their school," he said.

Memories of Aleppo

Garabedian hasn't forgotten the war-torn Aleppo he left behind. In the city, once one of Syria's largest and most successful, he ran his own clinic and Anjilik ran a lab, which they decided to keep open for as long as they could after the war began.

But, Garabedian said, it became increasingly clear that the life they'd worked hard to build could have been destroyed in seconds.

"The situation we went through was very awful," he said. 

"In the end, worse things were happening, we saw rockets hit neighbouring buildings," he said. "Three buildings collapsed immediately and I said that's it, we can't endure that. Maybe the [next] one will be our apartment."

But Garabedian says one positive thing that came out of the war is that his dream of his daughters studying in Canada might come true.