A jubilant crowd gathered Wednesday at the Goose Bay airport to witness the tearful reunion of a Ukrainian family who were separated when they left their home country for Canada after the Russian invasion.
Vasyl Panasyk and his son, Yurii, arrived in October to start anew in Canada. The two found work in construction and found housing so they could bring over Panasyk’s wife and two daughters.┬а
After Panasyk and his son┬аfound┬аa home, Panasyk’s wife, Iryna, and daughters Liudmyla, 10, and┬аAnastasiia, 13, were able to travel on the fourth charter bringing Ukrainians to Newfoundland and Labrador.
“Very pleased to be here, very pleased, very excited,” said Liudmyla through a notable┬аtranslator: Lake Melville’s Liberal MHA Perry Trimper, who worked in Russia and Ukraine for 14 years.
Liudmyla said she, her mother and sister, started the trip in western Poland before flying┬аto Newfoundland on a 10-hour flight with a refuelling stop in Iceland. Upon arriving, the three stayed overnight at Trimper’s┬аresidence in St. John’s┬аbefore flying to Labrador.┬а
“Her mother was falling asleep, the adults were falling asleep. The kids were just, they wanted to go on the plane. So there’s lots of energy,” Trimper said.┬а
Liudmyla said she hopes to have adventures, study English and to find a lot of friends in Labrador.
The family was sponsored to come to Labrador by the Happy Valley-Goose Bay Ministerial Association, which is composed of the leaders of the five different churches in the community.
They were welcomed by the association, community members, businesses┬аand the Happy Valley-Goose Bay Girl Guides with flowers, gift cards, a quilt in the colours of Labrador’s flag, and chocolates. The girl guides painted posters┬аto show their support for the young girls.┬а
“It’s really wonderful. It’s a wonderful welcome to see so many potential friends,” said Liudmyla.
Trimper travelled to Labrador from St. John’s with the group to act as┬аtranslator.
“I have really no concern about how they’re going to do here,” said Trimper. “They’re going to be very successful.
“We can only imagine what it must be like to have your family and your community ripped apart and then to be the target of so much hatred and then to come here with this amazing warm welcome.”
He said the Panasyk family and another who arrived on the same charter┬аwill both have case managers to make sure they get what they need to begin their lives in Canada.┬а
Anastasiia and Liudmyla are set to begin school soon at Mealy Mountain Collegiate and Queen of Peace School respectively. The two are learning English but Liudmyla┬аsaid it’s harder than learning Polish.┬а
“Polish and Ukrainian are very close,” said Liudmyla. “English is going to be another thing.”
Read more┬аfrom CBC Newfoundland and Labrador