June 11, 2023
By Beth Watkins, Program Director
In 2022, as AWE looked for ways to expand our community connection services, the Community Mentor Program was born.
The Community Mentor Program provides AWE clients individualized, ongoing connection and interaction with a member of the larger community and gives them an extra layer of support on their journey to stability and self-sufficiency.
Sibyl Snow, a longtime mentor to refugees and the AWE volunteer who helped kickstart the program, believes that at its heart, mentoring is about human connection – a caring that goes both ways. Mentoring is important, Sibyl says, because “no one should feel alone on their journey.”
Nasreen, an AWE volunteer and community mentor, knows what it’s like to be alone in a new country, and deeply appreciated the people who took her in as family while she was making the US her home. That experience made Nasreen want to be a community mentor at AWE.
Nasreen and her mentee, Alina, have spent a lot of time together over the past few months – picnicking, driving practice, career planning, and exploring Baltimore with Alina’s two children. One of Alina’s favorite experiences with Nasreen was visiting an art museum and getting lunch together. It was a “classy and aristocratic time,” recalls Alina.
Last November, Nasreen invited Alina to her home to experience her first Thanksgiving with Nasreen and her family. Alina describes the experience with emotion: “When you are alone in the US and don’t have your family it is so hard, but [Nasreen] makes me feel I have a family here and I’m not alone.”
Nasreen believes that being a community mentor is about reaching a level of comfort with your mentee, so they feel comfortable reaching out for help. Nasreen enjoys helping Alina understand her new home and navigate a new country and culture. For example, when Alina began driving in the US, she didn’t know how to get gas, as station attendants pump gas for drivers in her home country. So, she called Nasreen, who happily walked her through the process. “I am really so happy to know this amazing woman in my life,” Alina shares.
Another AWE community mentor, Nma Okafor, is an immigrant herself and understands how difficult it is to transition into a new country. She makes it a priority to check in on her mentee often, and when they get together, they spend most of their time talking, practicing English, and connecting.
Margaret Colleluori, a longtime AWE volunteer, mentors a young woman who lives outside AWE’s normal service area and is extremely socially isolated. They spend a lot of time talking about American life – holidays, work culture, and even dating.
Laura Speer was excited for the chance to use her Spanish and help a new member of our community feel welcome. Laura, her mentee, and her mentee’s daughter spend time at her mentee’s home and practice English. The experience has helped Laura better understand what the asylum and immigration process is like for families and why AWE’s work is so important.
While the Community Mentor Program is just beginning, we look forward to expanding it over the coming months and supporting more AWE clients as they acclimate to their new country and rebuild their lives in Maryland.
We’re so grateful for our community mentors, and the many, many others, who help us welcome our newest neighbor's home.
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