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CalgaryFilipino Bureau

Filipina mom grateful for extraordinary act of kindness in small-town Alberta

When Dixie Marie Judilla became pregnant while a temporary foreign worker at an Alberta Dairy Queen, she thought she'd have to leave her child half a world away until some unexpected help arrived.

Single mother isn't the only Filipino immigrant to find joy and community far from Canada's big cities

Finding family in small town
Gerd, left, and Elaine Schmidt, right, babysat Dominic Judilla, front, when he was an infant so his mother, Dixie Marie, centre, could go back to her job at the Dairy Queen in Claresholm, Alta. (Submitted by Dixe Marie Judilla)

She found herself alone in a new country, working on a temporary visaand pregnant.

Then, Dixie Marie Judilla says she was blessedby an extraordinary act of kindness in Claresholm, about 130 km due south of Calgary.

In 2008, Judilla left her small town in the Philippines for another small town in the Canadian prairies. She arrived in Claresholmduring aDecember blizzard.

Days later, she was making Blizzards at the local Dairy Queen.

Several years passedand money wastight. Then, Judillafound out she was going to be a mom. A single mom.And she was considering very difficult decisions.

"Because as a foreign worker, you're not entitled, you don't have any benefits and nannies are expensive. So I just cried and said, 'I think when I give birth I'll just take my son back home [to the Philippines]and let my parents take care of him. And then I'll just come back [to Claresholm]to earn money,'" said Judilla.

ButJudilla's son, Dominic who turns 10 this year was able to stay in Canada with his mother, thanks to a local couple.

WATCH | What it meant toDixie Marie Judilla when two near-strangers helped her son

Retired Canadians help raise Filipino worker's son, becoming her family support in a new country

3 years ago
Duration 2:01
Dixie Marie Judilla says she was blessed by an extraordinary act of kindness when she found herself alone, working on a temporary visa and pregnant.

Gerd and Elaine Schmidt were empty nesters and retired. Gerd met Judilla at the Claresholm Dairy Queen, where he was a regular customer.

While Gerd drank his coffee and read his paper, he'd often strike up conversations with Judilla. When he learned ofherplans to send her baby back to the Philippines, he and Elaine stepped in to help.

After baby Dominic was born, they offered to watch him, allowing Judilla to stay in Canada, keep her joband build the future she hoped for.

"Staying in Claresholm, I met these good people with a good heart, Canadians who helped me take care of my son for free without even asking for anything in return," Judilla said.

Dixie Marie Judilla and her son, Dominic, who is now 10. (Submitted by Dixie Marie Judilla)

Thirteen years and many snowstorms later, Judilla has no plans to leave rural Alberta. She has gained her Canadian permanent residency and now works at an Alberta Health Services long-term care facility.

"This is my town. This is my home," she said.

'Canadian grandma'

While the majority of newcomers to Canada settle in Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal and Calgary, where there are more established immigrant communities, federal programs like the Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot are helping fill jobs outside the big cities.

Roughly 25,000 immigrants have come to small towns (with populations less than 10,000) and rural areas in Alberta over the past decade, Statistics Canada estimates.

Dixie Marie Judilla says Gerd Schmidt treated Dominic like a grandson. (Submitted by Dixie Marie Judilla)

More than 15,000 Filipinos immigrated to small Alberta communities between 2010 and 2016, according to the most recent statistics.

Elaine Schmidt said her husband saw himself as a mentor to Judilla, and related to her because he was also an immigrant.

Gerd Schmidt was born in Berlin, Germany, and moved to Saskatchewan in 1955,where he worked on a farm. He and Elaine were married in 1968 and moved to Claresholm in the 1970s.

"[Gerd] didn't have any family in Canada, either," said Elaine Schmidt."He said when he came over, people helped him, so he wanted to help somebody, too."

The relationship between Judilla and the Schmidtslasted for years, with visits, meals and holidays spent together.

When Gerd died in 2017, Dixie Marie and Dominic were mentioned in his obituary. Even though Elaine later moved to Lethbridge to be closer to her adult children, she still stays in touch with the Judillas.

Before the pandemic, Dixie Marie would drive from Claresholm to Lethbridge so Elaine could visit with Dominic.

"I always tell him I'm your Canadian grandma," she said.

Through the Judillas, Schmidtsaidshe and her husband met many members of the Filipino community in and around Claresholm, and developed happy relationships.

Isaac, Rosanne, Susan, Roy and Schubert Hernando live in Stettler, Alta. (Submitted by Susan Hernando)

'Big sister'to all the new Filipinos in town

When Susan and Roy Hernando left the Philippines and immigrated to Canada in the late '90s,their first stop was Toronto. But they only stayed two years before moving to Yellowknife, and then to a much smaller community: Stettler, Alta.

"I didn't even know where Stettler was. All I knew was that it was in Alberta," laughed Susan, who was interviewed for her job via Skype.

She's now the director of financial services for the Clearview School Board. Roy Hernando teaches Grade 5 withthe Siksika First Nation, where he saidhe's always felt "very welcomed."

The Hernandos are active members of their local church and have performed at Stettler's annual music festival. Susan Hernando saidsmall towns are a great place for newcomers to put down roots.

"Salaries are the same. If you work at Tim Hortons[in Stettler], it's the same salary if you work at Tim Hortons in Calgary," she said. "And cost of living is way, way, way cheaper. And there's a lot of free stuff. Free vegetablesin the summer and sometimes there's even free beef! And free chickens [from nearby farms]!"

The Hernandos saidthere were around 40 Filipinos in Stettler when they arrived in 2009. Today, there are about 150.

Susan Hernando, right, picking corn with Edith Cole on her farm in Brownfield, Alta. Hernando says every year, Cole gives out free vegetables to the local Filipino community. (Submitted by Susan Hernando)

And Susan Hernando saidshe knows most of them.

"In a big city, if you see a Filipino, you smile but you don't usually talk to them. But in a small town you would immediately have the urge to talk to them."

Susan, who prides herself on being a "big sister" to all the new Filipinos in town, saidpeople in her small town make an effort to welcome newcomerswith a smile, a friendly greeting andsometimes, a couple ears of corn.

LISTEN | Filipinos embrace life in small-town Alberta:


In late 2020, CBC Calgarycreated the Filipino Pop-up Bureau to put a special focus on telling the stories fromone of the city's fastest growing ethno-cultural groups,the Filipino community. You can see more of the great stories and video from the series here:

Have a storythe Filipino Pop-up Bureau should focus on?Click hereto pitch your story.