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Refugees who lost fingers to frostbite in near-fatal 2016 bid to cross border become Canadian citizens

Refugees who lost fingers to frostbite in near-fatal 2016 bid to cross border become Canadian citizens

CBC
Monday, March 20, 2023 03:00:59 PM UTC

Two men who nearly died in 2016 during their treacherous walk across the Canada-U.S. border in the frigid cold say it's a privilege to finally call themselves Canadians. 

With the red and white of the Canadian flag draped over their back, Seidu Mohammed and Razak Iyal became citizens of their new home in separate virtual ceremonies earlier this month. 

Mohammed, 30, was the first of the two men who lost all their fingers to frostbite to receive his citizenship certificate in the mail.

"It's beautiful how it looks. Very beautiful. So I'm protecting it with my life," he says, chuckling, as he shows off the certificate, protected by a plastic sleeve, that once seem like an improbable keepsake.

"I don't want it to get like any stains on it, or anything. I protect it that way because this is like gold."

"It's who you are," Iyal, 40, adds.

The men from Ghana were previously strangers, and have since become like brothers. They say they're overjoyed to become citizens of a country that's helped them ever since the harrowing night they entered Canada, near Emerson, Man. They now live in separate units in a central Winnipeg apartment complex. 

Iyal said the occasion brought back memories of his chance encounter on Dec. 24, 2016, with the truck driver who stumbled upon the men that fateful evening and called 911 on their behalf.

Iyal remembers the first questions he asked of the driver. 

"I asked this guy, 'Am I in Canada? Are we in Canada?' And he told us, 'Yes.'"

Fearing deportation in the United States, where they had been living, Iyal and Mohammed walked through snowy farmers' fields to get to Manitoba.

"And today, we are Canadian citizens. That is very, very amazing thing that happened in my life," Iyal said.

In advance of his citizenship ceremony, Iyal was gifted a Canadian flag from a longtime friend, which he now hangs on the wall beside his bed. He said he admires it every night.

Both men are from Ghana and have previously said they feared for their lives if they were sent back home. Iyal said his own siblings are trying to kill him over a dispute regarding his late father's estate. 

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