#New2MTL: Choosing peace of mind - Action News
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Montreal

#New2MTL: Choosing peace of mind

Noushig Avakian Mouradian moved her family to Montreal to escape the war in Syria and start a new life.

Share your tips for adapting to life in Montreal and elsewhere in the province in our CBC Montreal series

Noushig Avakian Mouradian, and her sons Gorun, 10, and Daron, 12, celebrated their first Armenian Christmas in Montreal this week. (Shari Okeke/CBC)

NoushigAvakianMouradianand her family celebrated Armenian Christmas this week their first in Montreal.

Mouradianleft Syria in 2012 to seek medical treatment in Turkey for one of her two sons. At the time, she and her husband had intended to return to Syria.

But as the situation in their home country deteriorated, that plan changed.

"Everyone wants to feel safe and everyone wants to live in peace...I thought there is no peace, no safety in Syria. So I decided to [leave]."

Every day this week, CBC'sDaybreakintroduced a newMontrealerwho packed up and moved across borders.


Read all the stories from Daybreak's New2MTL series here.

Choosing Montreal made sense for Mouradian because she had relativesand friends already living in Quebec.

They told her about HayDoun, a non-profit organization that offered a collective sponsorship program.

TheMouradianfamily arrived in Montreal last September as privately sponsored refugees, supported by the Armenian community.

The family's first priority was to get the children Daron, 12, andGorun, 10 settled into school.

They're now living in an apartment inSaint-Laurent, a location they chose so they would be close toAGBUAlexManoogian, a private Armenian school.

The Armenian General Benevolent Union is raising funds to cover the cost of tuition for Armenian Syrian refugees.

Mouradiansaid she's grateful for the school's support and the personalattention the teachers give each student.

Her sons, who already speak four languages, are now learning French.

AGBUAlexManoogianschool is trying to make the integration process as smooth as possible for more than a dozen Syrian families new to Montreal. Ithosted a holiday party to mark the New Year and Armenian Christmas.

Chahe Tanachian, AGBU Alex Manoogian school principal is trying to help Armenian Syrian refugees adjust to their new life in Montreal. (Shari Okeke/CBC )

The school's principal saidhe reassures students arriving as refugees by telling them his own story.

ChaheTanachianwas nineyears old when his family fled the war in Lebanon and came to Montreal.

"I was in the same situation, in the same building, in the same school when I came in 1990 and life is great here there are so many opportunities," he said.

Tanachiantells his students to, "be hopeful because there's one way to go forward and [the]days to come are going to be better for sure."

Mouradian'ssons are working hard in school and discovering what they love most about their new hometown.

"I kind of love the hockey. It's really really fun," saidDaron.

Mouradian, a medical doctor with 20 years experience, now hopes she and her husband will find full-time work. She said they don't want to depend on social assistance and they are eager to pay taxes.

They are both studying French five days a week andMouradianintends to be speaking French within six months.

"I'm a dreamer, you know, but I want to have realistic dreams. Yes, we can work hard and have a good life in Canada, in Quebec."