#New2MTL: Choosing a safe place for the next generation - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:05 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

#New2MTL: Choosing a safe place for the next generation

Worried about their children's future and their own safety, Salman Ahmad and his wife left their native Pakistan and settled into a new life in Montreal.

Share your tips for adapting to life in Montreal

Salman Ahmad and his wife chose Montreal because they wanted their children to have more opportunities than they would in their native Pakistan. (Submitted by Salman Ahmad )

Salman Ahmad and his wife had established professional careers for themselves in Lahore, Pakistan.

But when their six-year-old son Yasir was about to start school, they knew they had to make the move to Canada.

"Pakistan has limited opportunities for professional growth, education and living standards," said Ahmad.

"For the generations to come, we were thinking that we should look at a more advanced country where we could improve our life."

Every day this week, CBC's Daybreak will introduce you to a newMontrealerwho packed upand moved across borders.

They came for a variety of reasons: to set up a business, to secure a better career, and for some like Ahmad, to ensure a more prosperous future for their family.

Read all the stories from Daybreak's New2MTL series here.

Ahmad says personal safety was a factor in his family's decision to leave Pakistan.

While Lahore, Pakistan's second-largest city,is generally safe,it has been the target of terrorist attacks.

In July 2013, a bomb blast in the Old Anarkali district killed five people and injured dozens more.

"It's not the safest country in the world anymore and there's everything you see in the news, which we were scared about," said Ahmad.

Salman Ahmad and his son Yasir exploring their new home town. (Submitted by Salman Ahmad)

The road to Montreal

Settling in Montreal hasn't been a straightforward process.

Ahmad's original application to the Skilled Worker Program was rejected. He couldn't afford a lawyer to present his case in court, so hedefended himself.

That impressed Canadian immigration lawyer David Cohen.

"He said he had never heard of someone defending themselves successfully," Ahmad said.

Within weeks, he hadan offer to work incase management at Cohen's firm in Montreal.

Ahmad settled into the Cte-des-Neiges neighbourhood with his family, and says he's made connections in and outside the Pakistani community.

"We meet at the mosque for prayers, and we talk about events back home in Pakistan, and about new opportunities we've come across here," he said.

The family's new life in Montreal has another silver lining: Ahmad's wife is pregnant with their second child.

"We were trying to have another child immediately but it happened that, after settling here, we received this wonderful surprise."

#New2MTL

Follow our series on CBC Daybreak and on CBC.ca/Montreal and share your advice for newcomers to the city on social media with the hashtag #New2MTL.

We'll gather the best responses and feature them in our coverage.