Connecting rural communities online during the Covid-19 crisis
By Peter Woods,
Refugees and people seeking asylum are among the most vulnerable groups facing the Covid-19 emergency, globally and in the UK. The daily challenges that confront them here – poverty, hunger, insecure housing, depression and isolation in an already difficult environment – are intensified by the current pandemic.
"In supporting the Islington Centre to adapt to the current crisis, I am drawing on lessons learned and contacts made during my 2019 Fellowship, which looked at ‘The Language of Friendship: Refugees Learning with Locals’." - Rosemary Brown, Fellow
The charities that provide a lifeline, like the Islington Centre for Refugees and Migrants where I volunteer, have had to shut their doors. Instead, we are adapting face-to-face operations so that we can continue to deliver vital support to 150 people across London who have fled war, violence and persecution. We have moved our essential services online and we are reaching out to our service users by telephone.
Being asked to stay at home is not easy when 'home' is a sofa in a friend's house, or a bed in a crowded hostel. Getting food and basic supplies is even more challenging – especially for those who have no income and are denied the right to work. Our support is needed now more than ever. One of our service users described what it is like to be a destitute asylum seeker during a pandemic, in a recent article for The Independent which you can read here.
The Islington Centre for Refugees and Migrants is enacting a three-point emergency response plan:
Planning for an uncertain future looms large on the centre’s agenda, as we seek further innovative ways to meet the needs of our service users under lockdown. These people are already traumatised by crises in the countries they have fled, leaving loved ones behind and struggling to rebuild their lives.
In supporting the Islington Centre to adapt to the current crisis, I am drawing on lessons learned and contacts made during my 2019 Fellowship, which looked at ‘The Language of Friendship: Refugees Learning with Locals’. My Fellowship took me to Greece and Ireland to research how pioneering community organisations are mobilising volunteers to welcome refugees through language lessons.
We know that a shared language removes barriers to integration and unites communities. We are sharing resources and strategies, along with the Mayor of London’s Social Integration Team, so that refugees and people seeking asylum can continue to learn the language that is crucial to integration, despite the overwhelming challenges of the Covid-19 emergency.
The views and opinions expressed by any Fellow are those of the Fellow and not of the Churchill Fellowship or its partners, which have no responsibility or liability for any part of them.
By Peter Woods,
By Geneva Ellis,