Sudanese
youth resettled in the United States between October 2000 and
September 2001 have received extensive press attention for their
strengths, the experiences they have endured, and the challenges
they face adjusting to the United States. Known as “The
Lost Boys” in popular media, about 700 entered foster programs
designed for unaccompanied refugee minors, and approximately 3,000
more resettled here as young adults. For more information, see
the BRYCS featured
search on Sudanese youth.
These youth place great importance
on connections–staying connected to their cultures, to friends
who have resettled in other parts of the country, and to those
remaining in refugee camps in Africa.
Their intense desire to reconnect
with family members they have been separated from remains high.
In fact, a few have successfully located family members in Sudan,
or nearby countries, through international family tracing efforts.
As
our June Spotlight
suggested, such connections are critical for all refugee youth.
Getting
(Re-)Connected, Helping to Stay Connected
A new video profiling three Sudanese youth in the United
States, A Great Wonder, provides a compelling
case for special efforts to help youth remain connected to their
cultures and communities. You can find information on this video
in the featured search above.
The
Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL) offers a Sudanese youth website,
for the purpose of helping youth resettled in different parts
of the United States reconnect with each other. It provides free
email accounts and a directory of participating youth across the
country. Access beyond the homepage is restricted to Sudanese
youth resettled between October 2000 and September 2001. This
site was funded by the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration
(PRM) at the U.S. Department of State. Click here
for more information.
A
BRYCS roundtable in July will discuss the importance
of connections to culture and community, among other topics, Foster
Care at a Cultural Crossroads: Refugee Children in Public Foster
Care System will be held July 20-22nd, in Washington, DC. For
information on how to contact roundtable organizers, click here.
Also
in Washington, DC, a Sudanese Youth Gathering
will bring together more than 230 youth from around the United
States for five days of informative workshops, discussion, and
reflection in July. The youth will also participate in an advocacy
day on Capitol Hill by bringing key concerns to members of Congress,
such as the resettlement of friends and family members left behind
in refugee camps.
The Gathering is the result of requests
from the youth themselves, registered in a series of regional
meetings over the past year. It is being held in association with
the All Come Bearing Gifts . . . Will You?: National Migration
Conference 2003, jointly organized by U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops/Migration and Refugee Services (USCCB/MRS) and Catholic
Legal Immigration Network, Inc. (CLINIC), July 6-10, 2003. Special
guests will include Bishop Paride Taban of Sudan, as well as other
presenters from the Sudan and the United States.
In August of 2002, the Ethiopian
Community Development Council, Inc. (ECDC) held the Southern Sudanese
Youth Summit for about 300 Sudanese youth. The reunion was held
at a YMCA camp near the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, with funding
from the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement. It included a
day trip to Washington, DC, with visits to the national monuments,
museums and other sites.
Results
Upcoming from New Research on Sudanese Youth Well-Being
A
team of independent researchers from the Boston University School
of Medicine has been studying a range of health outcomes of over
300 Sudanese youth in the refugee foster care system. Preliminary
results show functional health outcomes (how health problems impact
on daily life), as well as coping skills used in stressful situations,
to be quite good with very high ratings of overall health and
health improvement since arrival in the U.S. Some of the youth,
however, were noted to have emotional difficulties, including
20% with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and emotional
or behavioral problems in the family or home setting. These findings
are briefly noted in an executive
summary of the Project Report.
This research has been led by Paul
Geltman, MD, MPH. Dr. Geltman is Assistant Professor of Pediatrics
and Dental Medicine at the Boston University Schools of Medicine
and Dental Medicine; Medical Director of the Refugee and Immigrant
Health Program, Massachusetts Department of Public Health; and
staff pediatrician and practice administrator at the Whittier
Street Health Center in Roxbury, MA.
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee
Service (LIRS) and USCCB/MRS, BRYCS’ partner agencies, supported
this research by facilitating participation of refugee foster
care programs affiliated with each of the two agencies. Trained
staff in ten such programs across the country greatly assisted
the research process, by administering a series of health questionnaires,
and recording interviews with youth who elected to participate.
LIRS and USCCB/MRS eagerly anticipate
Dr. Geltman’s final research results in the coming months.
Watch the BRYCS clearinghouse for information on how to find his
results as soon as they are available in publication.
Right
now, you can see our featured
search on health for more information on the health needs
of refugee children and families, as well as cultural perspectives
on health issues.