Morgan Dunlop – This Magazine https://this.org Progressive politics, ideas & culture Wed, 26 May 2010 13:02:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.4 https://this.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/cropped-Screen-Shot-2017-08-31-at-12.28.11-PM-32x32.png Morgan Dunlop – This Magazine https://this.org 32 32 Checking in with Abdelkader Belaouni a year after leaving church sanctuary https://this.org/2010/05/26/abdelkader-belaouni-free-update/ Wed, 26 May 2010 13:02:03 +0000 http://this.org/?p=4693 Abdelkader Belaouni, who spent nearly four years living in church sanctuary before being granted status. Illustration by Todd Julie.

Abdelkader Belaouni, who spent nearly four years living in church sanctuary before being granted status. Illustration by Todd Julie.

Free at last. After three years and nine months thwarting a deportation order in the sanctuary of a Montreal church, Abdelkader Belaouni became a Canadian citizen in October 2009.

Belaouni was one of the refugees I spoke to for my article “Gimme Shelter” in This Magazine’s July-August 2009 issue. At the time, he was living in the shelter of a century-old house on the grounds of Saint Gabriel church, in the Pointe-St-Charles neighborhood in Montreal. [That article is nominated for a National Magazine Award, by the way! – Ed.]

In June 2009, after almost four years of tireless campaigning on the part of his supporters (and just after the issue went to press) victory came in the form of a telephone call. Belaouni’s lawyer Jared Will, called to say the Quebec government was going to allow him to stay in the country on humanitarian grounds.

First though, he would have to complete a medical examination in Tunisia, which borders his native Algeria. The Canadian government demands such examinations for all immigrants in an effort to prevent strain on Canada’s health care system. Belaouni was worried that he might not pass the examination; he is legally blind and suffers from diabetes.

Nonetheless, he began fundraising for the trip. With the support of his friends, Belaouni collected over $10,000 from donors across Canada. He flew to Tunisia on September 23. Four weeks later, Belaouni received a call from the Canadian embassy in Tunisia. He had passed the medical examination and his Canadian visa was ready.

On October 22, he was back in Canada, now his home. His almost four year stay in sanctuary paid off. He joins the more than 150 refugees who’ve avoided deportation with a stay in church sanctuary.

The congregations act as safety nets for what they see as holes in Canada’s immigration system, namely the lack of a formal appeal system in the refugee determination process. A bill (C-291) that would see a formal appeal system implemented was being tossed around parliament at the time “Gimme Shelter” went to print. But in December 2009, it was defeated at third reading in the House of Commons. The vote was tied. The speaker broke it with a vote against.

Belaouni is grateful for the safety net his friends at Saint Gabriel’s church provided. He and his supporters say he was unfairly treated by the refugee determination system, and that a stay in sanctuary was the only remaining option. Today he lives in Saint Hubert, just east of Montreal, in a one-bedroom apartment. He looks healthier than the last time I saw him. He tells me he lost 10 lbs—credited, he says, to his daily exercise routine and raw-food diet.

He is also fulfilling many of his dreams. The album he completed while living in sanctuary is now available on iTunes. He has two books in the works, one about his life and the other about the Algerian revolution. He is also set to start work at an immigration center in Montreal at the end of May.

I caught up with him on May 17, the day before his 43rd birthday. Here are a few minutes of our chat.

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This Magazine nominated for three National Magazine Awards https://this.org/2010/05/07/national-magazine-award-nominations/ Fri, 07 May 2010 21:34:20 +0000 http://this.org/?p=4519 Katie Addleman, Morgan Dunlop, Graham Roumieu

This happened a couple of days ago now and we’re only just now getting around to blogging it, but we’re very excited to tell you that This Magazine has been nominated for three National Magazine Awards. Industry awards can be pretty inside-baseball, but this is an excellent opportunity to highlight a few of our many hardworking contributors who are receiving some special recognition from their journalist peers with these nominations. And it’s a chance for you to catch up on some of the compelling articles we published in 2009. The full list of nominees is available at the National Magazine Awards Foundation’s website, and we’d also like to give our congratulations to our fellow nominated small and independent magazines, including Geist, The Walrus, Maisonneuve, Spacing, Prefix Photo, Taddle Creek, AlbertaViews, The Ryerson Review of Journalism, Briarpatch, and Border Crossings (among others).

Here are the This nominees (drumroll please):

Katie Addleman was nominated in the Health & Medicine category for her feature story on drug legalization, “Addicted to failure” (which was a keystone of last November’s Legalize Everything! issue).

Morgan Dunlop was nominated in the Best New Writer category for “Gimme shelter,” her feature on undocumented migrants living in church sanctuary in Canada, and the work of those faith communities to reform our cumbersome immigration policies.

And illustrator Graham Roumieu was nominated in the “spot illustration” category (an illustration smaller than a full page) for this cheeky scene that accompanied Darryl Whetter’s column on the lack of sex in CanLit. Note that Graham is nominated four times in this category for three different publications. He’s a busy guy.

Graham Roumieu's illustration, nominated for a National Magazine Award

*Graham Roumieu may not be exactly as pictured.

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