World Refugee Day draws diverse mix of Kansas Citians, businesses

June 20, 2023  |  Teagan King

People, businesses and service organizations gathered in the parking lot of the Kansas City Public Library's Northeast Branch for a World Refugee Day event on Saturday. The United Nations has designated June 20 as the official World Refugee Day; Teagan King and Flatland

Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Kansas City PBS/Flatland, a member of the KC Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, The Kansas City Beacon, and Missouri Business Alert.

Click here to read the original story.

The Kansas City Public Library’s Northeast Branch parking lot was full of lively music and friendly chatter Saturday morning as people gathered at Kansas City’s World Refugee Day event.

As the sun shone down, attendees talked with friends and volunteers and watched the performers sharing traditional art and dance from their home countries.

The event, organized by the library’s Refugee & Immigration Services & Empowerment, offered a range of resources to the local refugee community, including several organizations that support new arrivals in finding work and gaining important job and life skills.

One such organization present was Della Lamb, which helps resettle refugees by getting them set up with Medicaid, food stamps and housing, among many other services.

Taleah Brewer, part of Della Lamb’s community sponsorship team, said events like the World Refugee Day celebration are important for outreach to potential new volunteers and for reaching people who may need their services.

“We just want them to know that we’re out here and available to help,” she said.

Della Lamb, along with other organizations at the celebration, also help provide support to new arrivals looking for jobs. KC Scholars, another such group, used Saturday’s event to share information on its new program, Great Jobs, which offers courses in certified nursing assistant training, information technology security and construction basics, among a long list of others.

This program is virtual, self-paced and free to join, which KC Scholars Recruitment Manager Edwin Locke said helps make education and career advancement accessible.

“We’re in the workforce, and we know people have lives and they have jobs. So we’ll help work around those,” Locke said. “We’re trying to level you up so that you can better your life and your family.”

Reda Ibrahim, RK Contractors; photo by Channa Steinmetz

Reda Ibrahim, a visitor at the event, started his own business as another way to provide support and resources for refugees in Kansas City.

His company, RK Contractors, hires Middle Eastern refugees and teaches them how to find and keep jobs, as well as non-career skills like renting a house and learning U.S. cultural customs.

“When I came here, I didn’t find enough resources to help me out, so I struggled to start and basically make the way. So I’m making the way (for others),” Ibrahim said.

Ibrahim also runs a nonprofit, Mercy in the City, to create housing for refugees and displaced persons to help them become self-sufficient. He is now planning on creating a Middle Eastern Chamber of Commerce. The current Chamber of Commerce provides no representation for business owners like him, Ibrahim said, so he wants to create this new Chamber of Commerce to better represent businesses run by people with Middle Eastern backgrounds.

His business and organizations, as well as events like World Refugee Day, are important to welcoming new arrivals and helping them truly become part of the Kansas City community, Ibrahim said.

“If we’re not gonna absorb these minorities in the fabric of the society, they’re gonna create their own bubble, and this is going to create more segregation,” he said. “They’re gonna create a more, not diverse, but divided, city and we don’t want that because I love this city.”

Dancers perform at Kansas City’s World Refugee Day event held on Saturday at the Kansas City Public Library’s Northeast Branch; Teagan King and Flatland

Multiple food trucks were also at the event, including Sugar Skull Grill. Though not a refugee or immigrant himself, owner and founder Ricky Franco said he was inspired by his family’s story and history in the restaurant industry to start his own company.

He said his dad and uncle came to the U.S. with $5,000 and a goal to open a restaurant, so the inspiration for his Sugar Skull food truck had “been in the family a while” after seeing his family’s business

Jerusalem Cafe, another popular food truck, was at the event, as well as speakers with the United Nations (UN), which created World Refugee Day under the UN’s 1951 Refugee Convention to celebrate refugees’ courage. The UN has designated June 20 as the official World Refugee Day.

Martin Okpareke and Abdul Bakar, two local residents and former refugees, spoke at the event on behalf of the UN about their experiences and why this event is important to them.

Mayor Quinton Lucas also briefly stopped by the celebration to speak with attendees. He said Kansas City’s cultural diversity, especially in the Northeast area, which historically has been a local gateway for immigrants, is beneficial for the city.

“(The cultural diversity) welcomes new people, welcomes more business opportunities, and lets us be this great place,” Lucas said.

Teagan King is a University of Missouri journalism student and summer reporting intern at Kansas City PBS and Missouri Business Alert, a fellow member of the KC Media Collective.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Bungii

        Startups to Watch, Innovation Exchange returning; Startland News announces 2020 events calendar

        By Tommy Felts | December 17, 2019

        Startland News’ most popular annual and monthly events are set to return in 2020, Austin Barnes said Tuesday, releasing a full calendar of events for the new year. “In the last six months of 2019, Innovation Exchange drew its biggest crowds since its return from hiatus in March 2018,” said Barnes, programming director for Startland…

        Jeff Rohr and Rachel Smith, SquareOffs

        Village veteran SquareOffs launches long-awaited social opinion site, tops $2M+ in funding

        By Tommy Felts | December 17, 2019

        SquareOffs hopes its new consumer-facing destination website — showcasing interactive “microdebates” aggregated across a growing network of publishers and influencers — moves digital conversations back to civility. A fresh round of funding will help, said Jeff Rohr. “We are all tired of the toxicity that fills our social media feeds and dominates comments at the bottom…

        Ben Nelson, Huck Adventures

        Startup Road Trip: Huck Adventures goes west, using AI to turn outdoors into a social setting

        By Tommy Felts | December 17, 2019

        Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. BOULDER,…

        Laura Manivong, Fattyhead Keto Crust

        Keto crust on the rise: Fattyhead bakes ingredients for expansion into new distribution deals

        By Tommy Felts | December 14, 2019

        Laura Manivong is feeding a hunger for keto diet-friendly pizza crusts that already stretches to freezer aisles across the metro — with stores and distributors salivating for more. “Out of the blue, I just called Sam Paris and Paris Brothers,”  Manivong, founder and CEO of Fattyhead Keto Crust, said of how a recent distribution deal…