50 years after arriving in Canada, this Toronto family is sending 50 other refugees to university - Action News
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50 years after arriving in Canada, this Toronto family is sending 50 other refugees to university

Fifty years after arriving in Canada, the Nanji family is donating $1 million in support of 50 refugees pursuing higher education.

Nanji family among thousands exiled from Uganda in 1972

From left to right: Rema Jamous-Imseis, UNHCR representative in Canada, Filippo Grandi, UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Nimi Nanji-Simard, director of the Nanji Family Foundation, Dominique Hyde, UNHCR's director of division of external relations, Pyarali Nanji, president of the Nanji Family Foundation, and Alex Tom, UNHCR's head of private sector partnerships in Canada. (Valerie Agawin/UNHCR)

When 16-year-old Nimi Nanji-Simardarrived in Canada in 1972, she knew the countrywould be an "important new home" for her family.

"We were received with so much compassion and respect," she said in an interview with CBC Toronto.

Having been stripped of their citizenship and assets in Uganda,Nanji-Simard, her parents and siblings were among thousands who had just fledunder the rule of then-dictator Idi Amin.

They landed in Montreal, later settling in Toronto where her father and mother,Pyarali and Gulshan Nanji, eventually started theNanji Family Foundation.

Through the foundation, the Nanji'smade it their mission to give back to a long list of hospitals and organizations both in the country that welcomed them and to a myriad of other international causes.

Now, in honour of their 50 yearsin Canada and how far they've come as a familythey'reproviding university scholarships to 50 young refugees across the world.

Ugandan Asians arrived on Sept. 18, 1972 at Stansted Airport on the first of several specially chartered flights to Britain shortly after Ugandan military dicatator Idi Amin implemented a new regime expelling all Asians from Uganda. (Keystone/Getty Images)

"No matter how successful one becomes, we're always aware of our roots and we know where we came from,"Nanji-Simard said.

"We're so blessed to be in a country that allowed us to grow as much as we did financially, academically, socially, in terms of our communities it's every level."

The scholarships aremade possiblethrough the Aiming Higher campaign launched in 2020 by theUnited Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

The UNHCR says the family's donation of $1 million will provide sorely needed funding to refugees seekinghealth-related university studies in their countries of asylum.

More than 90 million refugees worldwide

The UNHCR hopes the Nanji family's gift will encourage others tosupport opportunities for young people facing forced displacement.

"It's not just the right and moral thing to do," said Levon Sevunts, a communications officer for the UNHCR."We very often forgetthat refugees have the tremendous potential to give back."

Sevuntssaysbringing awareness to international issuesis especially important now, with so much of the world's attention on the crisisofUkraine. Data from the UNHCR shows that before the displacement of more than 7 million Ukrainians,there were already 84 million displaced people acrossthe rest of the world.

"There are so many other issues ... Syria, Yemen, theRohingyarefugees in Bangladesh," Sevuntssaid.

"We have to make sure that the generosity, this incredible outpouring of support for Ukraine, doesn'tcome at the expense of all other crises."

On Dec. 2, 2010, North York General Hospital officially reopened its renovated Medical Imaging Centre, largely funded by Pyarali Nanji, right, and his wife, Gulshan. The couple is pictured here with Justin Trudeau, whose father, Pierre, was Prime Minister when thousands of Ugandans were offered sanctuary in Canada in 1972. (Submitted by Nimi Nanji-Simard)

Nanji-Simardagrees, calling her family's donation a "call to action."

"It's time for all of us, all Canadians, all global citizens, to realize that not everyone is as fortunate and that we can uplift lives all over the world."

'We are all one in the same'

In particular,Nanji-Simardsays it's vital that educational opportunities be given to youth a cohort that is "very vulnerable."

Those same opportunities were given toNanji-Simardwhen she first arrived to Canada.

"We had school counselling, we had career counselling whatever guidance we needed was always available,"Nanji-Simardsaid.

While she and her siblings were in school,her parents started buying real estate and eventually came toown Markham-based Belle-Pak Packaging Inc. It's through the success of that company that they were able to pursue philanthropy and their steadfast goal of giving opportunities "not handouts" to those in need.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, left, and Pyarali Nanji sign the grant agreement in support of the UNHCR's Aiming Higher campaign. (Valerie Agawin/UNHCR)

"In my life I have learned something, that if God gives you opportunity, try to share it," Gulshan Nanjisaid in a statement.

"First of all, you have to make sure that you are taking care of your family, your community, and then the whole country. So, I thought we have to pay back to the country, and the world ...and for more than 20 years we have been doing this."

Nanji-Simardsays the family's latest gift to UNHCR was given with the hope that the narrative of "us and them"will lessen.

"We are all one in the same."