At ceremony, refugees speak of gratitude: ‘I think we’ll find our identity now’
HALIFAX — Jelele Etefa and her husband Bona Dhina sang the Canadian anthem, waved plastic flags and repeated a citizenship oath at a Halifax waterfront museum Monday.
It was the end of a long trek for the Ethiopian refugees, who were aware of the moment’s particular poignancy.
Dhina said he’d heard of the desperate mid-winter border crossings by Africans seeking refugee status in southern Manitoba, as U.S. President Donald Trump pushes to bring in an immigration ban targeting seven majority Muslim countries.
The 39-year-old father said it saddens him to see the increasing challenges for refugees, and the opposition growing in some nations.


