Sewing class teaching newly-arrived Afghan women more than just sewing - Action News
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Calgary

Sewing class teaching newly-arrived Afghan women more than just sewing

A class for Afghan women starting new lives in Calgary is using sewing machines to help them fashion a fresh start in a new country.

Needlework brings them together to build new social lives and economic skills

Newly-arrived Afghan women more than just sewing in sewing class

1 year ago
Duration 1:00
A class for Afghan women starting new lives in Calgary is using sewing machines to help them fashion a fresh start in a new country.

A class for Afghan women starting new lives in Calgary is using sewing machines to help them craft a fresh start in a new country.

The women fled violence in their home country after the Taliban returned to power there in 2021.

The federal government has brought more than 30,000 vulnerable Afghans to Canada, with many now settling and starting new lives in cities like Calgary.

Many are family members of former interpreters and others whohelped Canada'smission in that country, makingit unsafe for them to stayonce the Taliban regained power. Others include persecuted and religious minorities.

A woman sits behind a sewing machine, stitching a piece of fabric.
An Afghan woman learns how to use a sewing machine at a class in northeast Calgary. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

The Centre for Newcomers program, launched in February, was designed to tackle some of the biggest obstacles in making anew start, particularly for women: finding work, learning English, making friends and forming new support networksto benefit mental health.

"The idea is to bring these women together so they can break isolation and enhance chances of socialization," said ShamailaAkram, director of vulnerable population services at the centre.

The women huddlearound sewing machines, measuring and cutting fabric and solving problems together inside a trainingroom at the agency's busynortheast offices.

"They can meet, theycan have conversations, but sewing is also an employment opportunity, teaching them skills for opening a small business or finding jobs," she said.

"They start by learning how the machines work, how to thread the needle, and then they move to more complex skills so they'll be ready to work in boutiquesor something like that," she said.

A photo shows three women working with a piece of fabric, one cutting the fabric with scissors.
A group of Afghan women measure and cut fabric. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

Akram says the classes are also about helping the women to reclaim their resilience and confidence, often lost in the trauma of their past experiences in Afghanistan.

Most of the women in the two classes have been in Canadafor only six months.

Akram says they also learn about financial management and health issues, and hear from guest speakers who visit the classes.

"We decided to create a platform where they feel comfortable, belong to their own culture, to gain the trust of the community," said Akram.

"It enhances their self-esteem and that sense of relaxation around people who've been through the same issues and experienced the same barriers. It has huge mental health effects," she said.

Akram says putting thefocus on sewing machines and tasksinstead of their day-to-day problems is also meditative and offers a temporary escape from the pressures of family life as a newcomer.

Shamaila Akram is pictured in an office at the Centre for Newcomers in northeast Calgary.
Shamaila Akram with the Centre for Newcomers says the sewing classes have been a big success and are helping women in many different ways. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"It's a mindful exercise and at the same time it gives them a feeling of worth," she said.

"I like the class. I speak in English," said newcomerShakila Haidira, who,like most of the women in theclass,speaks only a few words of English. "I've been in Canada for one year."

Akram says the class, which takes place every Friday, had to beexpanded to meet the demand.

She saysthere's a wait-list now to get into the program.