Ethiopian and Eritrean seniors latest to seek help accessing food from Calgary support group - Action News
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Ethiopian and Eritrean seniors latest to seek help accessing food from Calgary support group

A grassroots Calgary outreach organization that helps immigrants access food and a support services says it's seeing, for the first time, an influx of seniorswho are struggling to afford groceries.

Organization that helps immigrant families says more and more cant afford groceries

Ethiopian foods at Umoja Community Mosaics food bank. The organization delivers food to people in need all over the city. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

A grassroots Calgary outreach organization that helps immigrants access food and a long list of other supports says it's seeing, for the first time, an influx of seniorswho are struggling to afford groceries.

Umoja CommunityMosaic, which runs a food bank in the southwest, says it's seeing more groups they've not been in contact with before who are now calling, desperate for help as inflation and the rising cost of food becomes too much to bear.

The organization helps immigrant and low-income families settle and integrate into communities all over the city.

A big part of their work is helping families access culturally appropriate and traditionalfoods they use to cook daily meals with, including different types of flour and teff, which is a fine grainused to make common Ethiopiandishes like enegra.

It's the food they grewup with and it's whatthey feed their families here.

Along with regular supermarket shopping, theseitems are now becoming out of reach for many people with already strained budgets unable to stretch any further.

Abby Taye has been speaking with Ethiopian and Eritrean seniors, many of whom are reaching out for help for the first time. She says some have been moved to tears at having to ask for help. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"I got a call one morning saying we had around 17 seniors gathered at our building who had come looking for food," saidAbby Taye, a support counsellor with Umoja who speaks several languages used by Ethiopian and Eritreans, including Amharic andTigrinya.

"Then my phone calls went all week, from different seniors. I called a friend with another organization and she said to expect more in the coming weeks," said Taye.

Taye says the seniors areespeciallyin need of Ethiopian food items like different types of flour, which they can no longer afford, along with other groceries. She says they were apologeticand coming forward for help was a last resort for them.

"They said, 'we're sorry, we don't usually do this but we cannot afford to buy food,'"said Taye.

"For me, it's very close to home seeing seniors who arefrom where I'm from crying. It's hard to ask for food,so I'm sad, to be honest," she said.

Taye says it's not easy for a small, grassroots organizationreliant on donations from the public to buy the food it uses in its hampers.

Umoja CommunityMosaic started in2010as a soccer club called Soccer Without Boundaries, set upfor immigrant kids from places like Syria, Sudan,Somalia, Rwanda and Afghanistan, to name just a few,run byJean Claude Munyezamu.

Now it's a full-blownoutreach program helping new Canadians adjust to their new lives and communities, offeringfood for families in need, laptop loans, mental health supports,tutoring andotherresources.

Umoja Community Mosaics food bank is based in the southwest community of Glendale but serves the entire city via a delivery service. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

"We have a waiting list which has been trending in the last couple of months," saidNurishah Dharamsi, an anti-racism co-ordinator at Umoja who also supports its programming and community outreach work.

"This situation with the Ethiopian seniors is something we're used to. We get referrals every day now for emergencyfood hampers," said Dharamsi.

"It's worrying but we know the pandemic exposed a deep structural gap in the food system for a lot of newcomers and families who can't access regular food banks," she said.

Dharamsi says their focus is on providing culturally appropriate foods in a dignified way, through a delivery service, providing participating families with two hampers per month, worth around $60.

She says seniors are especially vulnerable and have additional needs like medications, accessibilityand dietary requirements.

She says as well as fielding emergency situations, like the recent influx of Ethiopian and Eritrean seniors with empty fridges, there's a growingwaiting list forothers in need of help.

"Every month, we have to prioritize where we allocate resources and much-needed help," said Dharamsi.

She says their entire food operation relies onthe generosity of private donors.

"We're a very small organization with a very large impact."