Handcrafted buttons welcome Syrian refugees to Quebec
Montreal woman uses crafts to raise money, awareness for new arrivals
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A Montreal woman hopes to counter anti-refugee sentiments with handcrafted welcome buttons for new arrivals.
- Westmount private school knits tuques for Syrian refugees
- Quebecers knit, donate tuques to Syrian refugees
- 161 Syrian refugees arrive in Montreal
Marie Brodeur-Gélinas wants the waves of Syrian refugees that continue to arrive in Quebec to feel welcome.
"I very quickly felt this was the tool I was missing to express my desire to welcome, to counter hateful messages that pollute social media and garbage radio," Brodeur-Gélinas told Radio-Canada.
Brodeur-Gélinas bought the rights to the illustration she saw on social media and immediately got to work to make it a button.
She started with a small order of 1,000 buttons but as the movement gained traction, she ordered another 10,000 this week.
"I wanted to show that we can wear on our lapels a message that is softer, positive and welcoming."
The money raised goes toward RIVO-Résilience, an organization that offers psychological services to refugees. Brodeur-Gélinas has given $800.
From churches to clinics
The buttons aren't only limited to Quebec — they have made it as far as British Columbia and Switzerland.
Doctor Gilles de Margerie, who works in a CLSC in the borough of Côte-des-Neiges—Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, decided to pin a button to his stethoscope.
He often treats patients who came to Quebec seeking asylum or refuge and he wants them to feel welcome.
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"We know that in healthcare, it's essential to create trust and it is also important as a welcoming society," de Margerie said. "So if a button can do that, why not?"
A parish in Lévis ordered buttons to distribute and raise money for an arriving Syrian family.
"It's a way to raise awareness and to counteract the fear associated with the arrival of refugees," said Ginette L'Heureux from Saint-Joseph-de-Lévis Parish.
Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Marie-Laure Josselin