For many asylum seekers in Montreal, long journey includes stop at YMCA
Organization that helps those seeking refugee status sees significant but manageable spike in past year
After paying a smuggler nearly $2,000 to get him to within akilometre of the Quebec-U.S. border, Mohammed El-Hashemi walked into Canada at an unmarked crossing not far from Lacolle, Que.
In the two years since, the 48-year-old from Yemen has been granted refugee status, managed to find an apartment and two jobs, at a call centre and a factory.
"If there was no war in Yemen, I wouldn't come," he said."Canada is the most secure country."
Like many refugee claimants who arrive in Quebec,El-Hashemispent his first weeks at the YMCA residence in Westmount on the outskirts of downtown Montreal.
Accommodation atthe building onTupper Street is among the services offeredby PRAIDA, the provincial government organization that helps claimants in their first months.
On Wednesday, the organization offered detailson how its been coping with the influx of asylum seekers that have come to Quebec in recent months.
'We are not being overwhelmed'
"For now, it's fine. We are not being overwhelmed," she said at a news conference alongside El-Hashemi and another refugee, Ibtihal Kaddour, a Syrian who arrived in 2015 with her daughter.
Dupuis said there have always been fluctuations in the number of asylum seekers coming to Canada, citing, for example, Haitians who came to Quebec after the 2010 earthquakeand Kosovars who fled interethnic violence in the late 1990s.
Last month,PRAIDAoffered help to 329 people, compared with 143 during the same month a year earlier.
The increase, she said, may be due to a combination of a change in policies under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the arrival of President Donald Trump south of the border.
But Dupuisstressed she doesn't know for certain.
"How are we to know that?" she said. "We are here to provide a humanitarian service."
Struggle to adapt
Not everyone who makes a refugee claim at the border uses PRAIDA's services, Dupuissaid, explaining that some stay with family or friends, or even at a hotel.
But she said many refugee claimants suffer from post-traumatic stress after leaving their homeland under duress, and they benefit from psychological counselling.
Children, especially, require care when they arrive in Canada, and parents often need help enrolling them in school, she said.
PRAIDAalso helps newcomers find a place to live, apply for social assistance or language courses and, ultimately, look for employment.
Dupuissaid it's difficult to predict whetherthe number of claimants in need of assistance willcontinue to rise.
If it does, though, PRAIDA may eventually require more government funding, she said.
'Very welcoming, very generous'
El-Hashimi is hopeful his wife and two daughterswho are now living in the United Arab Emirates will soon join him in Montreal.
A smuggler helped him get from Buffaloto a road north ofPlattsburgh, N.Y. He walked the rest of the way.
"The procedure in the United States takes seven years," he said, explaining his decision,whereas Canada is "very welcoming, very generous."