African Refugee Youth’s Experiences of Navigating Different Cultures in Canada: A “Push and Pull” Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Ethical Considerations
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Youth’s Cultural Adaptation Experiences Before Coming to Canada
“I left Sudan and went to Ethiopia to start school and then I stayed for a couple of years then they gave us a resettlement paper. We filled it out and ended up coming here.”(25-year old Sudanese male)
“We went to Cameroon, I saw our house, the new house and I was surprised, I was not used to it. It felt so weird. I saw the people and they were all different because there were people from Burundi and Cameroon. Their cultures were also different.”(20-year old Burundian male)
“Well at first, it was kind of hard because people in Nigeria were insulting us by saying, ‘You Congolese people, you guys cannot stay in your country,’ because there are a lot of Congolese people in Nigeria. I felt like the people there were ignorant, I felt like I had nowhere to go, my life was ruined, and I did not know why I was still living.”(22-year old Congolese male)
3.2.1. Disruption in the Family
“My dad went back to Burundi to work because in Cameroon it was hard for him to work. In Cameroon, it is not easy to find a good job and stay there. In Cameroon he had a nice job, but they did not pay him well. The payment was always late yet in Burundi he had a better position, so he went back in Burundi to work.”(20-year old Burundian male)
“My parents divorced when I was like four years old, so I never saw my father since I was like seven years old. You know to grow up with that longing for my father is not so lucky.”(14-year old Somalian male)
“I ask my mom, ‘Who is my father?’ Sometimes she tells me, ‘Your father was a good man, he usually helped me a lot, he was trustworthy,’ all those. But I ask her, ‘Why did he leave us?’ She tells me, ‘I do not know too.’ It makes me wonder.”(14-year old Somalian male)
“I keep repeating ‘it is a hard time’ because as a kid I did not get that love that one is supposed to get from their parents. I was just going to school and pretty much raised myself. I had to grow up on my own, never stopping to work for something that I wanted. I never gave up or whined for anything. I never ask anybody for anything, but I believe in hard work.”(25-year old Sudanese male)
“When I arrived, I joined my family and it took me a long time to connect with my stepsiblings. I knew that they loved me, but I was not used to them. When I came, I just used to live with my cousin, my sisters, and my brothers. I never had a chance to talk to my stepbrothers, and then when I came everybody was happy to see me. However, we could not understand each other. It was so hard. I was so sad and sometimes I thought that maybe my mother did not like me either.”(18-year old Congolese male)
3.2.2. Our Cultures Are Different
“Back home, our parents were very strict on us. They would say, ‘Oh do not go out.’ Those were the standards. But in Canadian culture, parents are very relaxed. You know, their children turn 18 and they tell them ‘We will kick you out of the house, go get yourself an apartment,’ but our parents want to keep you even though you are 21, 22, years old because they fear, they do not trust that their child can live on their own. It is more of the culture thing, like a black people thing.”(25-year old Nigerian Female)
- Participant:
- “We are not in Africa anymore; I know we are expected to keep the African culture but that has to stop.”
- Interviewer:
- “You do not think it is a cultural thing, like you know when in the African culture children are meant to be sent to do things.”
- Participant:
- “Well I believe there is a limit for everything. There is a limit especially when your parent is able to do what he/she is requesting you to do, because that is just being lazy. We are not in Africa anymore and I have to stopsome of the African cultural practices.” (19-year old Congolese Male)
“I discovered that nothing was halal. What they were selling and used to give us for breakfast was not halal. Back home everything you eat is halal of course. What I did was to ask where I could find halal food. We did not want to feed ourselves with something that was not halal because we are Muslims.”(20-year-old Congolese Male)
3.2.3. Searching for Identity: A Cultural Struggle
“How do I adapt myself with the Canadian people? What, how do I behave in a manner that gives pride to all immigrants in Canada and to Canadians and to my family? I have not faced something that may be very rough or very rude to myself or from a Canadian citizen or from other refugees like me. I feel comfortable but I face challenges. I do not succeed, as I desire.”(24-year old Congolese Male)
“We went to Rwanda, Zambia, like a lot of countries. People would always look at me and ask, ‘What are you? Are you a Congolese? Do you speak Swahili?’ I would respond, ‘No I am everything you know’.”(20-year old Congolese male)
“Mostly I ask my mom, I asked her ‘What am I?’ and she told me, ‘You are half Canadian, half Kenyan, half Somalian, because we came from Somalia but I was born in Kenya.’”(14-year old Somalian male)
“You cannot go to someone’s house you know. When I came here, I learned that one needs to give everybody his or her space. You do not go to people. So it was really hard. When you go to school you see everybody is cool you know, they have their friends, like everybody is with somebody, they will not go to someone who is alone. Like nobody really cares about you apart from the teacher.”(19-year old Congolese female)
3.2.4. Learning the New Culture
“In my first two months, I was a very quiet kid in school. I was just analysing everything, how people act, because our cultures are very different. I was trying to understand the behaviours of Canadians, how, why, and what they are like.”(20-year old Burundi male)
“When we came here, oh my God, I had that feeling for the second time of my life of coming to a new place and living a new life. However, this time, I was older and better prepared. I was like wow, everything looked different, I went to school, and it was better than the school in Cameroon. I really adapted well because usually for newcomers when you go to school and do not know how to speak English, you are not going to make any friends, unless there are some other African that are going to take you and you guys start hanging out. It is sort of like in Africa because in Cameroon, when you are a new student, people come around you, hey what is your name and stuff like that.”(20-year old Burundian male)
“I am teaching my brother and sister how to live here. Before they do anything, I ask them to think about their actions and evaluate whether they are good or bad. To ask, ‘Can I do it; if I do it can I be responsible for it?’”(20-year old Burundi male)
“I grew up here, so I know more but when I came, the experience was just different. English wise, the lifestyles, what I see it is just as if ‘oh I got myself blended in this.’ The good thing I was happy about is that I came here when I was young, and this was great for me you know, I could do a lot of stuff.”(25-year old Sudanese male)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Woodgate, R.L.; Busolo, D.S. African Refugee Youth’s Experiences of Navigating Different Cultures in Canada: A “Push and Pull” Experience. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042063
Woodgate RL, Busolo DS. African Refugee Youth’s Experiences of Navigating Different Cultures in Canada: A “Push and Pull” Experience. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(4):2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042063
Chicago/Turabian StyleWoodgate, Roberta L., and David Shiyokha Busolo. 2021. "African Refugee Youth’s Experiences of Navigating Different Cultures in Canada: A “Push and Pull” Experience" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 4: 2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042063
APA StyleWoodgate, R. L., & Busolo, D. S. (2021). African Refugee Youth’s Experiences of Navigating Different Cultures in Canada: A “Push and Pull” Experience. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), 2063. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18042063