Shelters seeing more domestic abuse in immigrant community in north - Action News
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Sudbury

Shelters seeing more domestic abuse in immigrant community in north

A womens emergency shelter says the issue of domestic abuse among immigrants is becoming more prevalent in Sudbury. Marlene Gorman, the executive director of YWCA Genevra House, says that's due to the influx of newcomers to the region.

The only person that they know and have been around is their abuser

Board with
YWCA Genevra House is an emergency shelter for women escaping abuse from their intimate partners and women over 50-years-old escaping abuse from their live-in caregiver. (Angela Gemmill/CBC)

Incidents of domestic abuse among newcomers in Sudbury areincreasing with the influx of immigrants to the northeast, according to the executive director of an emergency shelter for women fleeing abusive relationships.

"Oftentimes, they're isolated in their home, withheld food, locked in a room, and so even being able to access any type of support, whether it's informal or formal, is a real barrier," said Marlene Gorman, the executive director of YWCA Sudbury who operatesthe YWCA Genevra House, describing the challenging situation facingimmigrant domestic abuse victims in Sudbury.

Gorman says immigrant women often do not report such cases to authorities in fear of deportation. Rather, many of these women would go directly to the emergencyshelter for help.

"They're dependent on their spouse who has sponsored them to come to Canada, come to Sudbury, and once they get here, they realize who they came here for is a different person, an abusive person and they're not being treated well," explainedGorman.

"They're afraid to leave because they have no other means to support themselves. They figure there is nowhere else to go. The only person that they know and have been around is their abuser."

A woman sitting on chairs.
Marlene Gorman, the executive director of YWCA Genevra House, has worked in the social services sector for over 30 years. (Aya Dufour/CBC)

Gorman says many victims do not speak up due to concerns around immigration status, language barriers and racism; rather they're fighting to escape their abuse but stay in the country in silence.

She says many of the women who immigrated to Sudbury were sponsored by their spouses or partners. Women are often threatened by their abuser, and told their immigration applications will be pulled, or their sponsorship cancelled.

"They're stuck trying to do this on their own without the financial means. I don't even know if there's any immigration lawyers here in Sudbury. A lot of people have to go to Toronto to get their papers completed," said Gorman.

"The trauma of abuse with all of the other things that she has to do, traveling from Sudbury to Toronto and figuring out where she's going there with a language barrier, feeling vulnerable. Without support, it would be even more difficult."

'Forcing women to stay in unsafe situations'

Margarita Pintin-Perez isthe former senior coordinator for the Initiative to End Gender Based Violence at the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants. She now, works at Western University as a community partnership leader at theCentre for Research andEducation on Violence Against Women andChildren. Sheexplains the idea further.

"We attach immigration status as a necessary status to get access to benefits to support, to services in Canada. You can't apply for housing, childcare This becomes a huge barrier that can force women to stay in unsafe situations."

A woman in black stands in front of a banner with
Margarita Pintin-Perez at the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrantss conference on gender based violence in November 2023. The conference was entitled "Building a Blueprint: Reimagining and strengthening non-status, refugee and immigrant survivor leadership to address gender-based violence across Canada". (Margarita Pintin-Perez)

The Government of Canada created temporary resident permits for victims of family violence in 2019. According to the newsrelease, the permit recognizes the increased vulnerability of victims of family violence who are out-of-status and dependent on their abusive spouse/partner for their status. It allows access to an open work permit or study permit, as well as healthcare coverage through the Interim Federal Health Program, including medical and psychological services and prescription drug coverage.

However, Pintin-Perez says many immigrants may be unaware of their options due to language barriers. "They might be unfamiliar with the Canadian legal system, the community resources. They're also facing heightened anxieties about being involved, interacting with government systems due to their immigration status."

Pintin-Perez says structural racism may also lead to feelings of social isolation. "There can be further harms that are happening and being reproduced, even in the spaces they might be accessing support and services."

She says there needs to be more education to promote a more responsive, equitable system that victims can access. She says there also needs to be more funding for services like YWCA Genevra House.

"We need to continue to prioritize and properly fund the existing supports and services that are out there because there is really great work that's happening."