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Refugees from Bhutan settle in Pittsburgh
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 30 - 11 - 2008


Chitra Prassad Gautam
and his family watch in awe as water comes out of the
shower head in the bathroom of their new apartment, according to AP.
«I have a question,» Gautam says, holding up a bottle of
shampoo. «Do I put this in my hair before going in the
shower or after?»
Gautam, 19, his parents and his two siblings are among the
first of about 5,300 ethnic Nepalese refugees from the tiny
south Asian country of Bhutan who this year started leaving
refugee camps to resettle in the United States. The U.S.
has agreed to take in 60,000 of them.
Unlike other, high-profile refugee groups such as Iraqis
and Burmese, the ethnic Nepalese have gone largely
unnoticed. Since there are no Bhutanese communities in the
United States, most are being resettled near cities like
Pittsburgh, where housing is affordable and officials hope
diverse populations will reinvigorate urban areas hurt by
deindustrialization.
Charitable organizations responsible for resettlement get
the families apartments, food, Social Security government
idenitfication cards and English classes, and help them
find jobs. After three months, the families will have to
provide for themselves, usually working minimum wage jobs.
Bhutan is a predominantly Buddhist constitutional monarchy
bordered by China and India. In the early 1990s, the
monarchy instituted sweeping legislation that effectively
stripped the ethnic Nepalese, a Hindu minority also known
as the Lhotsampas, of their citizenship, their right to own
property and their ability to get government jobs.
Since then, an estimated 100,000 ethnic Nepalis have fled
to refugee camps.
Bhutan has significantly opened up in recent years,
embracing democratic freedoms and coronating a young king
on Nov. 1. Nevertheless, the tiny Himalayan kingdom remains
tightly controlled. Traditional robes and colored sashes
indicating class rank are mandatory and only 20,000
foreigners are permitted to enter the country annually on
supervised trips.
Like most others in Bhutan, the Gautams were farmers.
Chitra Prassad Gautam and his sister, Uma, 17, were born in
Bhutan. Their younger brother, Raju, 15, is part of the
generation born in refugee camps in Nepal. They were
educated in schools run by the United Nations, an education
that gives these children an advantage over their parents,
many of whom are not even literate in their native
Nepalese.
In 1992, the Gautams moved into a one-room, dirt-floored
hut in a camp about 25 miles (40 kilometers) from the
Nepalese city of Damak. They often had to wait in line for
hours to fill two cans with water. They shared a latrine
with another family and bathed in a river.
But now they are in their new apartment in the Pittsburgh
suburb of Castle Shannon. They have suddenly had to adapt
to running water, indoor toilets, carpeting, closets, a
refrigerator, electric sweepers and clock radios _ because,
as their caseworker explains, promptness is important in
America.
«I've never seen a house like this,» Gautam said when
caseworker Molly Ferra took them through the three-bedroom
unit, showing them the small kitchen already furnished with
bags of rice, tea, hot pepper sauce and a box of pots and
pans.
She explained the use of the refrigerator and freezer to
Gautam, the only member of the family who speaks English.
«Very cold,» Gautam noted of the freezer.
Although life in the United States is far easier, some of
the refugees do not want to leave the camps.
«Most of us want to return to Bhutan because we love our
country and our roots,» D.P. Kafle, a resident of one of
the camps, said in an interview in Nepal. «We are
patriotic Bhutanese and there is no way we will go anywhere
else.»
However, Larry Yungk, a senior resettlement officer with
the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, said 55,000
refugees from Bhutan have already signed up for relocation.
Norm-Anne Rothermel, Pennsylvania's refugee coordinator in
the Department of Public Welfare, said most cities are
eager to take in the ethnic Nepalese.
«Refugees are excellent workers,» she said. «They do
not want government assistance ... all they want is a fresh
start, so it's a win-win situation when it comes to
refugees.»
Mark Hetfield, senior vice president for programs and
policy at the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, said his group
has settled 117 refugees from Bhutan this year and expects
to double the number in 2009. HIAS is focusing its
Bhutanese program on Charlotte, North Carolina;
Springfield, Massachusetts; and Columbus and Cleveland,
Ohio. Some will likely be resettled in Pittsburgh as well.
«There is no well-established Bhutanese populations in
the U.S., so it is better to put them in places where
housing is affordable and they could have the opportunity
to buy a house in a few years,» he said.
Despite the refugees' struggles with the language barrier,
bureaucracy, job hunting and learning to live with modern
amenities, Gautam had a question about something that to
him seemed equally basic.
«A computer, will we get a computer?» he asked the
caseworker. «I need the Internet to send e-mail to my
teacher.» _ his U.N.-run school had Internet access.
Ferra told him the family will receive a TV but they will
have to purchase their own computer. At the library, she
explained, they can access the Internet.
«Yes, the library,» Gautam says grinning. «My teacher
told me I can get a card and use for free.»


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