While most refugees who’ve come to Canada chose to call Canada home. Belinda Lahu did the opposite. Leaving Canada and her family here for a new life in Kosovo. Being a child of Kosovo refugees who settled in the country in 1999 following Canada’s response in airlifting over 5,000 refugees, Lahu being a first generation of Canadian born learning and creating a new identity as Albanian- Canadian.
Her mother took her two daughters and left without her husband and fled to Macedonia, as he stayed behind to avoid endangering them. The war brought immense hardship to Lahu’s family. Although nobody in her immediate families died, they endured many traumatic experiences and witnessed horrific events. Lahu’s uncle was stabbed in the leg, and her family’s neighbor’s son was killed in front of his family. “When my mom first fled with my sisters, they stayed with her uncle’s family, but the Serbians eventually forced them out. She then continued her journey to Macedonia with my sisters on her shoulders, where she was finally reunited with my aunt and their family” she says.
Lahu’s mother would take on a new journey to Canada with her two daughters not knowing if her husband made it out alive. Lahu’s father went missing and was found through Red Cross and brought to Canada around six month later part of the family reunification program that was offered to the Kosovo refugees that came part of ‘Operation Parasol’ Canada’s emergency response program in relocating refugees to help with the refugee crisis flocking Macedonia in 1999.
Those experiences have not only made her family resilient but Lahu too giving her a deeper connection to contribute to her family’s homeland. Today, she works for the Government of Kosovo in the capital of Pristina. She’s one of many young people from Kosovo who’ve left their birthplace to give back to Kosovo especially since Covid-19 opened doors to remote workers, this giving her attention on the social media platform TikTok “Ever since I was a kid, I’ve had a deep longing for Kosova. I would hear stories of a home away from home—of the tragedies, hardships, and resilience—but I couldn’t fully grasp our culture, history, and heritage without being here. I needed to experience it for my own personal development, to better understand my parents' journey, and in a way to live the life that was taken from them”
Lahu shares that her family had to start a new life in Canada from learning English to obtaining education, something that was even more challenging for women like her mother as she juggled in raising 8 children in Canada “They sacrificed everything to stay in Canada. When the war ended, they were given the choice to return to Kosova but chose to remain in Canada to provide us with a better future” A sacrifice well worth it as Lahu and her siblings have all graduated with degrees in Law, Sciences and Psychology and giving back to their respective communities.