Many heartwarming stories have developed in the seven years since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greeted Syrian refugees arriving by plane in Toronto. But few caught the public’s attention as much as that of Tareq Hadhad, who was aboard the third planeload of Syrians to land in Canada, and his family.
In addition to receiving widespread media attention, Mr. Hadhad’s story has been made into a movie and also been told in a book.
For those of you who don’t quite remember their tale, a quick recap. Back in Syria, Mr. Hadhad’s father, Isam, had founded a confectioners in Damascus that eventually employed hundreds of people and shipped its chocolates throughout the Middle East. Bombing during the civil war leveled it.
The Hadhads became privately sponsored refugees in Antigonish, Nova Scotia. While the town is the home of St. Francis Xavier University, it is generally known for having an aging population rather than being economically vibrant.
Mr. Hadhad was midway through medical school when he fled Syria. But once in Canada, and with considerable help from the people of Antigonish, he vowed to re-establish his father’s business under the name Peace by Chocolate.
Mr. Hadhad agreed to meet me in Halifax for an update on the business and to talk about the role of immigrants in Canadian society.
Our meeting point, the brightly lit Peace by Chocolate flagship store in heart of the Halifax waterfront tourist zone, was one obvious symbol of the company’s fortunes, with a design featuring both peace symbols and motifs drawn from Syria, including a tiled archway.
Its opening in the spring of 2021 during the pandemic was something of an act of faith. But Mr. Hadhad told me that the return of cruise ships to Halifax this year has often brought long lines of customers outside the store. And even on a bitterly windy and dark late weekday afternoon, it drew a steady flow of chocolate fanciers.
This month, Mr. Hadhad opened a new, bigger shop and expanded the factory that produces the company’s chocolate. In all, Mr. Hadhad told me, Peace by Chocolate now employs about 75 people and could hire 30 to 40 more workers — if they were available in Antigonish. About 1,000 stores across Canada now sell its chocolates, thanks in part to a deal with the Empire Company, the Nova Scotia-based grocer that owns the Sobeys and Canada Safeway supermarket chains.
Building a business in Canada, he said, is much easier in than in Syria.
“It took my dad 10 years to establish the business in Damascus,” Mr. Hadad said. “You did it here kind of within a month.”
While Mr. Hadad said that factors like easier access to investment money in Canada make it possible for immigrants to set up successful businesses, community support for immigrants is just as important.
Mr. Hadhad is obviously proud of his family’s success and was pleased to talk about it. But he was also keen to discuss what’s become something of a personal mission for him: eliminating barriers for newcomers and showing Canadians the economic value of immigrants.
A former medical student, Mr. Hadhad is disturbed that many immigrants are unable to use their skills immediately when they come to Canada; instead, they often must undergo additional schooling, and face slow and costly certification processes.
Mr. Hadhad was told that if he wanted to pursue his medical studies, he would have to return to high school, obtain a Canadian undergraduate degree and then take medical school admission exams.
“It was absolutely ridiculous,” he said, adding that the regulations forced him to turn his thoughts to the chocolate business.
Mr. Hadhad regularly speaks across Canada, meets with governments and testifies to legislative committees about immigration. Based on that, he said he’s noticed there may finally be some movement when it comes to recognizing professional health care credentials obtained abroad.
“Change is happening not because of the willingness of politicians to solve the problem but because of the shortages in the health care sector” because of the pandemic, he said. “We are discriminating against all those people and causing them to live in depression and anxiety and fearing for the future of their families.”
Mr. Hadhad has made sure Peace by Chocolate has a social component to it. He said there are now about 200 Syrians living in Antigonish, population 5,000, most of whom work for the chocolate company, and they’ve recently been joined by several dozen Ukrainian refugees. Peace by Chocolate donates about 5 percent of its profits to various causes and charities.
While Mr. Hadhad has occasionally encountered anti-immigrant hostility (he said a man once accused him of coming to Antigonish to take his job), his experience has been that such sentiments are very much on the fringe.
“Everyone is seeing that this country is based on many values,” he said. “The most important values that Canada has are compassion, empathy.”
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Dan Bilefsky writes that Celine Dion’s emotional announcement that she is suffering from a rare neurological condition called stiff person syndrome came as she is in the midst of a career renaissance in Quebec, where the province’s younger generations have come to embrace her and her music.
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The Toronto area was hit by two shocking killings this week, Vjosa Isai reports. In the heart of downtown, the police charged eight girls, 13 to 16, with second-degree murder after a shelter resident was fatally stabbed in what the police characterized as a swarming. The girls may have met for the first time shortly before the killing. And on Sunday, a gunman killed five people in his high-rise building in suburban Vaughan. The 73-year-old man, who injured a sixth person and was shot and killed by police, had been ordered to appear in court the next day, where the condo board was seeking to force him to sell his apartment.
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The week began with Vancouver getting buried in snow and with an extraordinary cold enveloping much of the west. Now an exceptional storm has further disrupted travel and threatened electrical blackouts during the holidays. The Times has been covering the events for the past several days in a Live Briefing. You’ll find the latest atop The Times’s home page.
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At a meeting hosted by Canada in Montreal, about 190 countries approved a sweeping United Nations agreement to protect 30 percent of the planet’s land and oceans by 2030. The pact includes a variety of other measures to limit biodiversity loss, which is jeopardizing food and water supplies as well as the existence of countless species.
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Matthew Futterman looked into a $199 silicon collar whose maker claims it will help keep athletes’ brains safe. But the collar, developed based on discussions with a University of Toronto physiologist and expert in brain blood flow, may not live up to its promise, Matthew found in talking to experts.
A native of Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto, lives in Ottawa and has reported about Canada for The New York Times for the past 16 years. Follow him on Twitter at @ianrausten.
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