10 January 2018 – At a special summit at United Nations Headquarters in New York, universities, led by De Montfort
University (DMU), spotlighted ideas for practical ways they can use the skills, experience and voluntary power on their
campuses to support those in need in their local areas.
“Migration has become a scary word in some parts of the world. Some people use it to evoke apocalyptic scenarios,” Maher
Nasser, the Director of the Outreach Division in the UN Department of Public Information told the gathering, pointing
out that when well-managed, migration brings wealth and opportunities, especially when it is an individual's choice as
opposed to a necessity.
Selected by the UN, De Montfort University (DMU) in the United Kingdom, held the summit on Tuesday, which featured panel
discussions on refugees' challenges within local communities and universities. Partners at the event were expected to
sign an action charter which would set out what will be done by universities on their own campuses to address the
refugee crisis.
“The Together campaign fits perfectly with De Montfort's belief in the important role of universities as a force for public good,”
said Professor Dominic Shellard, De Montfort University Vice-Chancellor, explaining that DMU defines itself by its
diversity and being welcoming and open to all.
According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), an unprecedented 65.6 million people have been forcibly
displaced worldwide – including 22.5 million refugees.
Calling it a daunting number, Mark Charlton, DMU Head of Public Engagement told UN News: “It is a challenge for universities to really humanize the work they are doing and move away from the conversation
about statistics.”
“If you're talking about one person, or a family of people, it hits home a little more,” he added, “let's talk about
people's lives.
Inspired by Pope Francis' appeal that every parish host one refugee family, Diya Abdo, associate professor of English at
Guilford College, in Greensboro, North Carolina,
founded the 'Every Campus a Refuge' initiative, which calls on colleges and universities worldwide to host on their
campuses one refugee family and assist in their resettlement.
To date, Guilford College has hosted over 32 refugees, including 18 children, from Africa and the Middle East, providing
them with English instructions along with cultural, social, academic and career services.
“It's a wonderful place-based education for our students, […] they learn what it's like to be an immigrant in
Greensboro, to be a refugee,” Ms. Abdo says passionately.
UN News also spoke with a young woman who was herself once a refugee.
ZamZam Yusef's mother paid strangers to take her 7-year-old daughter out of Somalia to Sweden. “Treated quite badly” by
her so-called foster parents, at age 13 she shared her plight at a youth centre where an aunt in the UK was tracked down
and contacted.
She, as it turned out, Ms. Yusef was the most fortunate of her siblings. Her older brother died while migrating through
Greece and her sister was held in Libya for two years against her will. Fortunately, she was one of 160 people airlifted
to Rome on Christmas eve.
Ms. Yusef is determined to remain optimistic, and encourages everyone to get involved in the community, by
“volunteering, even making a cup of tea for an elderly person or helping refugees fill out forms.”
Launched in September 2016, 'Together' is a UN campaign that promotes respect safety and dignity for refugees and
migrants.