Living Well 60+ September-October 2014 | Page 24

24 SEPT/OCT 2014 Local Agency Helps Refugees Pursue the ‘American Dream’ Kentucky Refugee Ministries provides comprehensive resettlement services by Tanya J. Tyler, Editor Started in Louisville 21 years ago, Kentucky Refugee Ministries (KRM) is a resettlement agency dedicated to helping refugees become selfsufficient, contributing members of the community. What is a refugee? “By definition, refugees have to be out of their home country; they’ve been forced to flee for fear of their lives. They cross a border and then they apply to get into the refugee resettlement program,” said KRM resource coordinator Dabney Parker, who works in the Lexington affiliate office that opened in 1998. The refugees may be fleeing from religious, ethnic or political persecution. Most stay in the resettlement process for years and years and years, Parker said. Some Congolese have been in camps in Africa for up to 15 years. Some Bhutanese have been in camps in Nepal for 22 years. The holdup is mostly due to red tape. “When they cross the border and find a refugee camp, there are folks on the ground in those places that are interviewing, but they have to first of all prove that they qualify as a refugee,” Parker said. “They have to prove identification, and they don’t have documents a lot of times. If you’re fleeing, you don’t stop and pack a suitcase. So with the lack of documentation, just identifying them takes a very long time.” After going through the screening process, the refugees come to the United States, some of them right to the heart of the Bluegrass. “Kentucky is very different,” Parker said. “All of our folks are coming from very warm climates. One family came from the Congo. They landed in February at midnight and there were three inches of snow on the ground.” Once the refugees arrive in Kentucky, KRM’s goal is to help them settle into their new life. The agency provides new arrivals with furnished apartments. “After being in Africa or another location for 10 to 15 years in a tent or hut, a hardscape apartment – furnished! – is overwhelming, seen straight from an airport arrival after 48 hours of traveling halfway around the world,” Parker said. Volunteers help set up the apartments, greet the new arrivals at the airport and take them to various social service and medical appointments. “They come alongside and help them adjust to this new culture, this new land they’re in,” Parker said. Clients begin to take English as a Second Language classes and an eight-week course called World of Work that helps with résumé writing, online applications and interviewing skills. Within a year, generally, the former refugees are working [