“I felt like I had someone from my family with me that day.”

Rashed, Amira and their three daughters arrived in Northern Ireland in September 2019. The warm welcome they received from the Small World Community Sponsorship Group and their neighbours has developed into real friendships that have supported them through the pandemic and the arrival of a fourth daughter.

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Just six months after the family arrived the pandemic began. Rashed and Amira had been enjoying their English lessons where they could socialise with other Arabic speakers and their daughters were settling in at school when, like everyone, their world suddenly became a lot smaller. Those neighbourly relationships and the support of the group became even more important, especially as the first lockdown coincided with the early stages of pregnancy for Amira.

Pregnancy in a new country where you do not have experience of the health system or speak the local language would be hard anyway but to experience it in a pandemic when your husband can’t join you at medical appointments is even tougher. Amira would be driven to hospital in Belfast by one of the Community Sponsorship volunteers, Scotty, but he would have to wait outside while she was supported through her scans and check-ups by a hospital interpreter.

Another volunteer, Heather, who is an Arabic speaker, would check in with Amira after the appointment to see how it went and if any extra help was needed. For Amira one of the hardest things to get used to, having had a number of pregnancies in Syria and Jordan, was how little time she had with the clinicians: “Back home I can go to the doctor whenever I need to but here you have to wait for appointments. And when I first went to the hospital [to confirm the pregnancy] they told me what to do, gave me some vitamins and told me to come back after two months for the scan. I was shocked.”

When the time came for Lara, now 14 months old, to arrive Heather from the group was her birthing partner and interpreter. They had watched lots of YouTube videos together to prepare Amira for what giving birth in the UK would be like. She found giving birth a “nicer and smoother” experience and speaks of the kindness of the hospital midwife team, although the length of labour was a surprise as in the Middle East you receive drugs to speed things up. Of Heather she says: “I felt like I had someone from my family with me that day. I love Heather and feel like she’s another Mum.”

With the pandemic currently at a stage where communities can mix again the whole family are enjoying being out and about again. The eldest daughters Hala (8) and Seba (6) are back at school, Malak (4) is at nursery in the mornings and Rashed is volunteering at Jubilee Farm in Larne.

Jubilee Farm is the first community-owned farm in Northern Ireland and undertakes agricultural and environmental work with volunteers, refugees and asylum seekers, adults with learning difficulties, churches, and communities.

Rashed, whose mental health suffered during lockdown, has started volunteering there during the summer. “I was very happy, I felt like I was in a prison and had freedom at last.” He volunteers one day a week there and although he is new to farming and the work is hard it’s a high spot of his week: “It’s the first job that I have had here. It’s the first time I met up with other people and mixed with them. It’s hard work there but despite that you enjoy your time and talk to people and have fun so you forget about the tiredness of it.”

Despite the challenges of the pandemic (and the cold!) the family are settled and happy and with friends in the wider community. Amira sums it up when she says: “I won’t leave Whitehead. I have got used to it a lot!”

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