Thank you.
Again, every once in a while when we move motions in this place, Mr. Chair, my colleagues opposite will essentially ask why this is more important than what we're studying right now, when we have all these other things that are so important. The volume of stories and casework being presented here today I hope will leave the impact about why this is so important.
I will continue with another letter. They are asking for assistance in resettling their family in Canada. It states: “Before I arrived in Canada, we were all one happy family. I was a student, but we were not rich. We were happy. After ISIS arrived, all of the women were forced into marriage and made into sex slaves. ISIS started killing the older boys and men. My father told my mother, my sisters and me to escape. We escaped with some help from the people in our village who had cars. My father and two brothers stayed behind. We were in the mountains for seven days. We had no food, only dirty water, which had dead animal carcasses in it. We left the mountains after seven days, walking across the Syrian desert to reach the Syrian border. We were eventually picked up by vehicles and taken to a camp by the border. After one day it was possible to enter Kurdistan, as we were able to rent a vehicle and buy our way across the border. We were provided food and clothing, and we went to the Khanke camp, where we remained for two to three months.”
It continues: “We eventually went to another half-built house—no windows or doors—and eventually had to go to a different camp when the owner of the house evicted us. We remained there for two years. My cousin's wife was captured and then eventually bought out for $52,500 U.S. She selected my mother, sisters and me to come to Canada to help comfort her. The following family members are still surviving, and their locations are”—and they list a sister, a brother-in-law, three children, a brother-in-law, two children and a fiancé. “Pre-ISIS, we had a complete family and were very happy. After ISIS, we have been scattered. We no longer have the comfort of our family. We think about our surviving family members all of the time. The conditions in the camp are not good. People have to line up at 3 a.m. to get water. There is little food, and what there is, is not good. It is not very safe. And there are many bare electric wires, and fires happen often. I would like the Canadian government to help reunite our family.”
That letter was not...legitimately.... I don't know how it snuck in there—this one that I just turned aside since we don't have visuals today.
I will read one that is. This is another request for family reunification: “I've come to Calgary as part of the victims of Daesh program in 2017. I've come to Canada with my brother after being held in captivity in a prison and tortured by ISIS for nine months. I joined my sister and her family who resettled in Calgary five months before me. Many of my family members missing—parents, four sisters and four brothers. My younger sister, who was 10 years old, managed to escape ISIS after being tortured by ISIS for two years, but was killed by a bomb on the day of her escape. My heart is broken for her, my family and the Yazidi community. My brother-in-law has 10 missing family members too. One of my brothers, whose name is”—I won't read the name—is living in a camp in Iraq in deplorable conditions. Many members of my brother-in-law's families are living in the Mamrashan camp. My brother-in-law's families who are there include his mother and my siblings”—They list all the names. “They are unsafe and living in difficult conditions. I constantly worry about them. My constant worry makes me very uncomfortable. I am unable to do anything with my new life in Canada because of my constant worry and stress.”
It continues: “I am requesting that the government help bring my family members to Canada so they can be safe and secure with hope for a future. I also plead with the government to do everything possible to find my family members who remain missing, who are either dead in captivity with ISIS or are suffering unspeakable horrors. In addition, I would like to plead with the Canadian government to advocate on the international stage for justice for our community. I would like to see those responsible for the genocide be held responsible for their crimes. Please help me reunite with my family who are living in Iraq, and help me find my missing family members. I am unable to find peace without knowing the fates of my family members. I would like the Government of Canada to work with the international community to help those who are missing. I would like the Government of Canada to reunite all living family members. My heart is broken and will not be able to mend without being reunited with my family.”
This is another one: “I am writing to you today to request your help in reuniting my family members who are still in Iraq. I truly believe the only way for me to successfully settle in Canada and become an active member in my community is to bring my family together once again. Even with all the help I am currently receiving in Calgary, I don't think I will ever be able to feel at ease in Canada as long as my family is not safe with me here. I arrived in Calgary in January 2017 with my husband and my son. Before ISIS started attacking my people, we were living in a village called Wardiya in Iraq. I was working at home taking care of my family. When ISIS attacked at night we stayed in our village hiding for eight days before we managed to escape. We escaped to the mountains for a few weeks. We then walked to the Syrian border where we stayed in incomplete houses before going to another camp. We stayed in this camp until coming here to Canada. Some of my siblings were captured by ISIS and I don't know their whereabouts. My other family members who are still alive are waiting in camps in terrible conditions.”