Archive for the ‘Hannah Atkins’ Category

Hi guys!

Thought you might want to know… off the back of the article in The Guardian on the 25th June about having asylum seekers living with us, I had been asked to come on the Stephen Nolan’ 5Live show tonight.  However – just this minute, I’ve been canceled! They aid they may ask me to come on another time. I was really looking forward to trying to inspire others to help organizations such as Boaz Trust tonight!!!

Oh well :( Let’s hope they call me back for another day!!

Hope you’re well!

Hannah x

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  • Hey!

    Recovering from Glastonbury… Didn’t get much sleep!! Hit the road running as I arrived back in Manchester…Still have to process all that went on in Mexico and then Glastonbury…

    On Friday, there was an article in the Guardian’s G2 section about having Raza living with us – a lovely Kurdish 24 year old guy who has fled Iran to seek asylum in the UK – and was destitute because his claim was rejected.. I have only just had chance to properly digest the article since coming home from Glastonbury – which was where I was on Friday when the article came out. Amnesty international suggested the idea of running a story about a house-hold taking in an asylum seeker to The Guardian – and through a series of contacts – they found the Boaz Trust who we do a hosting scheme though – and the Guardian wanted to write the article about our story of housing Raza. I am really grateful to Emine Saner for writing the article so sensitively. We have had negative experience of the media putting negative spins on real stories – Emine got all the facts right and quoted us both perfectly. Thank you Emine.

    I can see from some of the internet chat rooms that the article has made people think about our policies here in the UK concerning asylum seekers who have a failed claim – usually through lack of evidence – which is really hard to collate. There are a few cynics of course too – the usual story about thinking most asylum seekers are economic migrants… if that were true of Raza – I think he will have tried to go back to Iran after 2 years of being homeless – getting hyperthermia on a park bench through most of the winter – when he had a job, family home, family and friends over in Iran… I understand that people find it hard to trust others – especially because you do have some people who do abuse the system – of course! There always will be a few people who abuse every kind of system – but I think it’s our responsibility to deal humanely with people who find themselves destitute in the UK – whether they made a concious decision to flee to this country or not….

    I am on the 5LIve call in on Sunday night if you are interested and want to ask me questions about us taking Raza – initially a stranger to our home. I have a feeling there may be a lot of cynical people phoning in because of the nature of Steven Nolan’s show. It’s on from 10pm. It’s not because we are good people – and need a badge – it’s because it’s the right thing to do for us. We have gained enormously from the experience. Everyone has something that they are created to do – a little bit out of the ordinary – this is one of ours.

    Here’s the article if you’re interested; (LINK to Guardian web-site)

    Our guest the asylum seeker

    Raza was left destitute after he was refused asylum. But then Hannah Atkins came to his rescue – by offering him her spare room

    Hannah Atkins and Raza
    Hannah Atkins at home in Manchester with Raza, the Iranian Kurd whom she gave a room. Photograph: Colin McPherson

    The journey to the warmth and safety of this end-of-terrace house in Manchester has been a very difficult one for Raza, a Kurd from a small village in Iran. He fled in 2007, arriving in northern England with no money and speaking no English. After his case for asylum was refused, he lost entitlement to any support and then spent a bitter winter sleeping in a park and seeking shelter in a church.
    Last week, we wrote about four asylum seekers who were living in barely imaginable destitution after their cases were refused. Many readers expressed their horror and wondered how to help. There are charities that work with destitute asylum seekers, though, of course, their funds are minimal, and there are not enough to help all the people who are rejected by Britain’s asylum system.
    The Boaz Trust is a Christian charity that works in and around Manchester. It places failed asylum seekers with people who have offered their spare rooms – for anything from an emergency overnight stay to several months at a time – as Hannah Atkins, a 28-year-old singer-songwriter, did. She sits on the sofa next to Raza, 23, who is in the process of appealing against the decision against him, and helps him with his English as he explains what brought him here.
    He had worked as a shepherd in the fields around his village since he was 10. One day, when he was about 19, some Kurdish political activists approached him and asked him to take their Kurdish-language newspapers back to his village. He did this a few times, but then someone tipped off the police – there have been many crackdowns on dissent in the Kurdish regions of Iran, where human rights abuses are numerous, and being a member of Kurdish opposition parties is punishable by death – and they went to his house to arrest him.
    “I wasn’t there,” he says with help from Atkins, “but they took my father, brother and sister. I haven’t seen or heard from them again, and I don’t know what has happened to them.”
    Somebody managed to get a message to Raza, who was in the fields working, that it wasn’t safe for him to come home, or even stay in the country.
    In 2007, he came to the UK in the back of a lorry, ended up in northern England and claimed asylum. For a while, he stayed with friends he had made, but had to leave after his case was rejected on the basis that there was not enough evidence that his life was in danger; staying with his friends, also asylum seekers, would have put their cases at risk too. After this, all his support was stopped and he was left destitute. Sleeping in the park in Bury, he ended up with hypothermia and was hospitalised for two weeks; it has left him with long-term health problems, such as a constant ache in his side, and his shoulder often seizes up.
    It is thought there are around 300,000 asylum seekers in the UK whose claims have been refused, and a large proportion of those are destitute. “They are faced with the choice of staying in the UK and being destitute, or returning to their country,” says Jan Swift, refugee programme director for Amnesty International. “Many are in fear for their lives if they go back. It is a horrific situation to be in. They are not allowed to work, which is why many will resort to illegal work.”
    Raza isn’t the first asylum seeker Atkins and her husband, a music producer, have hosted. An Eritrean woman, Elisabeth, came to stay with them for four months last year until her case was approved, and a week after she moved out, the charity arranged for Atkins to meet Raza, who has lived with them for seven months. They had a spare room, but weren’t in a financial position to give it out for free, so their friends clubbed together to cover the rent they would be losing. “I think it’s a great way to work it, because you might be somebody who wants to help, but you don’t have a spare room,” Atkins says.
    “We got on with him really well, he has a great sense of humour,” she says. “People say, ‘Aren’t you worried about giving a stranger the keys to your house?’ But you have to decide to trust someone from the start, and we just really liked Raza.” None of them knows how long he might stay – he is trying to get fresh evidence and a lawyer to help him with his appeal, but this will cost upwards of £500 and Raza, of course, has no money. “Although he is legally allowed to stay while he appeals the decision, he can still be deported at any time,” says Atkins. “Sometimes he goes to stay with friends for a couple of days and I worry if I haven’t heard from him.”
    For Atkins, it’s an insight into the way things are stacked against someone trying to prove they have a legitimate right to claim asylum in the UK. “His case is so hard to prove and the government requires so much evidence,” she says. “You’re guilty until you can prove you are innocent. But when you’re fleeing for your life, you’re not going to stop and collect evidence – documents, photographs – to prove your case.”

    An arrest warrant for Raza was smuggled across the Iranian border by a friend of a friend, who risked his own life, but British officials said it could have been forged. One day, Atkins herself received a phone call from the police. “They basically frightened me,” she says. “They said, ‘How well do you know the man staying in your house?’ Pretty well, I said. They said they wanted to speak to him, but wouldn’t tell me what it was about.” When she called back, she was put through to a department investigating sexual offences.
    “It turned out they had completely the wrong man – the man they wanted had a different name and date of birth. It was as if they hadn’t even checked they had the right person, they just went for someone with a similar name, and I’m sure some of that was racism on their part. It makes me so upset when I hear people saying awful things about asylum seekers.
    “They don’t understand that they wouldn’t be here if they could go back to their home country. He had a house, a job, family, friends. Here, he has nothing. It’s like he is imprisoned here.”
    Raza echoes this. “[In Iran] I worked for myself. I had a house, my own money. Here, I’m not allowed to work,” he says. “You can imagine why people are forced to work illegally,” says Atkins, although Raza hasn’t taken that route. If he needs clothes, his and Atkins’s friends buy them for him, and he eats at home with Atkins. When he first arrived in the UK, he spoke no English and enrolled on a college course but as soon as the government stopped his support he had to leave. Now he can’t afford to take another class, and his literacy is very low – he didn’t go to school – so he can’t teach himself from books. “It is very hard,” he says. The days are difficult if the others are working and he doesn’t have anything to do. “Sometimes I’ll just go to bed in the day, or I’ll watch TV.” He smiles and looks nervously at Atkins. “I am very, very happy to be here. I love it here, but it is very hard. What can I do? I can’t do anything.”
    Atkins helps him with his English, but the benefits of their living arrangements are definitely not all one way, she says. “Obviously, we have days when we’re down but it puts our lives in perspective – we have our friends and family around, we have everything, materially, we could want. Raza’s circumstances are awful, and yet he’s so chirpy, he gets on with it. We just really admire him.”
    A short while later, I hear from Atkins that Raza has been offered a place in a house with other Iranian asylum seekers by the council. He didn’t particularly want to leave Atkins and her husband, but if he didn’t take the place and the meagre support that was on offer – around £30 a week in food vouchers – he would have slipped through the system again. Even now, he is still under threat of deportation. “We were gutted that he couldn’t stay with us,” says Atkins. “We had a little goodbye dinner and he gave a really moving speech about how leaving us was like leaving another family, and that he would never forget what we’ve done. We’re really sad he has gone, but it’s a step towards Raza getting a bit of independence back.”

    Hey!

    Mexico was so amazing! I did so many videos -Taking me ages to edit – they will be up soon!

    I learnt so much about how it s possible to empower people who have little resources – not to be dependent on you or your schemes or projects – but how to empower people to help themselves out of poverty. It was really amazing to see in practice! I was really challenged about my own mind-sets and about how much we take for granted in the UK – health service, social welfare, communication, education…. the list goes on.  We really don’t know what we’ve got! I have been to some countries of similar economic status – with huge wealth gaps – but, somehow, it hit me more this time – maybe I’m a bit more aware in my old age!!!

    The Armonia charity’s founders; Saul and Pilar Cruz, have taught me so much – they have really given their whole lives over to to creating social justice – not just with their money, intellect, contacts, education… but with most of the hours of every day – practically showing that they 100% care for people that are suffering injustice in Mexico. I know it sounds woolly but it is really true.

    I’ve got soooooo much more to write…. and will add thoughts to my blog as I continue to process what just happened over the last 15 days!!

    We’re on our way to Glastonbury now… our good old Orange roaming dongle means we can be on the internet in the car!! If you’re at Glastonbury, I will be performing at The Elemental venue – opposite the Jazz World Stage. Pop in to get the gig schedule…. I should know definate times for tomorrow :)

    Hope you’re doing well!!

    Much love,

    Hannah xxx

    Hey!

    It’s hot!!!!! Muy Calor!! My Spanish has had to improve and fast!! I went to Peru nearly 10 years ago and learned a bit there, took a couple of months Spanish module at Uni…. and now here!!

    It’s been an incredible experience.  We visited some families and we thought it was maybe invading their privacy, but, not at all. One of the things I have realized here is how materially poor people are so isolated.  Even when they are in such an over-crowded area, they have no-one but their family to turn to.  They have no government help with anything – no health care, no benefits. They never have visitors outside of family members. Our visit to their home was so special to them.  Saul, one of the founders of Armonia is teaching us that by just giving money to poor people, that is helpful to their material needs, but coming to someone’s house shows that we care for THEM as people.

    We’re just sound-checking for our concert in the Theatre, and I’ve loads of time to kill – the sound guys have been here from 8 in the morning! It’s been a little stressful for some of the musicians here – they are used to plans not changing… and everything changes from one minute to the next here.  Who would take a trip across the world with 15 emotional creatives!! We’re all a bit sensitive!!!! Funny though.

    This concert is to raise awareness of the work of Armonia amongst the council and the government here – as well as raise money for the project.  The local people are also welcome to come.

    Here’s my vblog from the last couple of days….

    Still haven’t had a chance to re-type my notes yet…. will publish them soon :)

    Hope this finds you well! Once again, thank you so much for everyone who sponsored me to come here. I was hoping to learn some important principals about empowering people who are poor – not just materially poor, but educationally poor, socially poor and so isolated.  I am learning so much that I will be able to take into advocacy work for the rest of my life. So thank you.

    With love,

    Hannah x

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  • Hi!

    Hope this finds you well.  Here’s my latest video blog…

    I have loads of notes and will try and make them a little more readable before putting them on my blog.  I have learnt some amazing principals and been challenged about my values – this is really going to change my thinking for ever – and I’m not being dramatic!! I’m sooooooo enjoying myself!

    Much love,

    Hannah x

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  • I’ve arrived in Mexico City!

    Hi!

    I’m arrived in Mexico city, working with the Armonia Charity. V exciting!

    Gonna do a Vblog for you as much as poss… here’s my first one:

    Once again, thank you so much for those of you who sponsored me on my sponsored song-a-thon to raise money for this trip!

    Much love,

    Hannah x

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