immigrantscanada.com

Independent topical source of current affairs, opinion and issues, featuring stories making news in Canada from immigrants, newcomers, minorities & ethnic communities' point of view and interests.

Syrian Refugee Support Committee and British Columbia Comox Valley

Facebook: Macdonald, who helps run the Syrian Refugee Support Committee Facebook page, said she posted about the family of four needing diapers and within days, they had enough diapers to last three months, according to CTV. She said many donations, everything from winter boots to AppleTV, have come from complete strangers in their community of roughly 63,000 people. The privately-sponsored refugees arrived in British Columbia Comox Valley in October, but they needed some essential items. Social media also bolstered their efforts to raise about $40,000, she said. "Social media allows you to connect with people quickly," said Macdonald, who has worked in the immigration sector for more than 25 years. "It creating a whole new ball game." Giles Crouch, managing partner at Thistlewood digital research firm in Halifax, says social media is playing a key role in community organizing as 25,000 refugees arrive in Canada over the next few months. "It allows for coordination that we've never had before," said Crouch in a recent interview. "It a much faster way to organize, to have consistent messaging amongst groups and to share on a national and international basis. Without social media, just think, you'd have to be mailing out letters, making phone calls and sending faxes." Even the federal government is using social media to mobilize. It almost zero cost and makes it very easy to coordinate. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.