Home Out of Nothing Trailer

Posted April 27th, 2012 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


HOME OUT OF NOTHING traces the experiences of three women immigrants to Canada coming from very different parts of the world, including the filmmaker’s transition from her Russian homeland to Canada in the early 1990’s. The full documentary is available for purchase on Amazon.com

How do i convince Canadia Visa officer that i would return to Home country after visiting Canada?

Posted February 23rd, 2012 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

what documentation or what kind of story should i do in order to convince the visa officer to issue visa. I already have documentation of relative and friend ties, Good Job and all the luxuries of life at my home country.
What is the best approach?

Looking for a new White home?

Posted October 30th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

I cant live in North America anymore. I am sick of the way white people are being attacked in more ways than one. I am sick of interracial marriage and of the way the media encourages it. I am not a bigot. I dont hate other people, I simply love my own people too much to endure what is going on.

My question: Is there a country in Europe with very few minorities and ethnic groups? It has to be a country with strict emigration rules unlike Canada and Britain. I want to move to a White country where I can marry a White women and raise White children. Is there a country in Europe that is still determined to maintain its white identity?
I suppose there is no hope for my people

I need to find a new White home?

Posted October 4th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada
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I cant live in North America anymore. I am sick of the way white people are being attacked in more ways than one. I am sick of interracial marriage and of the way the media encourages it. I am not a bigot. I dont hate other people, I simply love my own people too much to endure what is going on.

My question: Is there a country in Europe with very few minorities and ethnic groups? It has to be a country with strict emigration rules unlike Canada and Britain. I want to move to a White country where I can marry a White women and raise White children. Is there a country in Europe that is still determined to maintain its white identity?
Typical! I did not say anything agaist ethnic groups. I did not say they should be deported. All I want is to move to a country where I can live with MY PEOPLE. And for that I am called a Nazi. Its incredible how brainwashed people are today.

Its not only about raising a White family. Its also about living with the knowledge that my sons and daughter will also raise White families and so on. I want a country which can ensure the continuity of our people(at least within its borders).
To N word with attitude: That may not be a bad idea
Savannah, while you have made some valid points, I dont agree entirely with you. Yes there will always be a minority group. But there is a big difference between having minorities within the white community and having non white minorities. Multiracial diversity causes intermarriage and the dilution of ethnicities. To me, this is wrong

I want to find a new White home?

Posted September 21st, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada
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I cant live in North America anymore. I am sick of the way white people are being attacked in more ways than one. I am sick of interracial marriage and of the way the media encourages it. I am not a bigot. I dont hate other people, I simply love my own people too much to endure what is going on.

My question: Is there a country in Europe with very few minorities and ethnic groups? It has to be a country with strict emigration rules unlike Canada and Britain. I want to move to a White country where I can marry a White women and raise White children. Is there a country in Europe that is still determined to maintain its white identity?
I am looking for a country where even in the majour cities there are few minorities.
We are a dying breed because we arent doing anything about it
Rudy, the sad thing about this is that most people dont even know about the jewish agenda. They call people like us who are aware of it crazy conspiracy theorist. Maybe our race deserves to vanish because of its ignorance and complascency. Who knows?

Brother and Sister Reunited After 52 Years – Home Video

Posted February 23rd, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


My mother Anna Zsarnai, my father and I escaped from Hungary during the 1956 Revolution. My parents worked on a Communist work farm approximately 200 kilometers from Budapest, the capital of Hungary. When the Russian tanks rolled into the capital, thousands of people were killed. The exodus began and many fled the country before the borders were closed. Many were caught and many more imprisoned. Friends and family members were turning each other in and no one could be trusted. One cold November day in the middle of the night, 17 people took a chance and decided they would escape not just from the Communist work farm but from the country. When we left our one room home, my mother at the tender age of 20 with a 4 year old daughter, locked the front door, threw the house key over her shoulder and never looked back. My mother’s family had no idea that would be the last time they would see my mother and me. We were hidden in a covered, horse drawn bread wagon. Women and children in the wagon, the men driving the wagon and one man scouting the road ahead on a motor cycle looking out for Russian tanks. After two days of traveling the main roads, our motor cycle lookout came back with warnings of Russian tanks up ahead. The following 2 days we traveled on dirt farm roads with no idea which direction we were going in. The last town before the Austrian border, huge speakers blasted announcements “If anyone is caught housing or helping anyone escape the country they will be

My Home and Native Land: Dr. Joana Goncalves

Posted November 4th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


NARRATOR: My home and native land: Personal stories of coming to Canada. DR. JOANA GONCALVES: When I came to Canada, I wanted to continue to be a doctor. And I would do anything to pursue that dream. NARRATOR: Dr. Joana Goncalves emigrated from Portugal in 1974. DR. JOANA GONCALVES: I was born in Madeira Island, Portugal. I lived in Madeira Island with my mother and my brothers and sisters. NARRATOR: Portugal was ruled by a dictatorship for most of the 20th century. During that time, thousands of people left Portugal to seek better economic and political conditions in other countries. DR. JOANA GONCALVES: When I came to Canada, I have two young children and I decided to stay home for them to grow until they would go to kindergarten and then pursue my career. NARRATOR: Dr. Goncalves later took the exams required to practise medicine in Ontario. She failed at her first two attempts. DR. JOANA GONCALVES: I thought to myself at that time was this is not going to be Canada that is going to tell me you are not going to be a doctor. And that gives me courage to pursue. I had one doctor telling me, oh, you will never get it. I start crying. And another doctor was in there. She’s Korean. And then she comes to me and says look it, no one has the right to tell you if you are able or not. Only yourself. And that I heard that, for me it was really a great enthusiasm. When I got my licence, of course the first person that I called was her. I went to her and I said, I got it. This is my

My Home and Native Land: Jacey Chae

Posted October 28th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


NARRATOR: My home and native land, personal stories of coming to Canada. JACEY CHAE: If I had an opinion at a dinner or something, you know, I would be thrown a comment like, well, what do you know? You’re a woman. NARRATOR: Jacey Chae, Guest Services Manager, Toronto Blue Jays, emigrated from Korea in 1974. JACEY CHAE: If you’d like to stand here, when the players are done with batting practice, we’ll try to get some autographs. Our father was very well educated and he put himself through school. Upon graduating from university, he couldn’t really find a job. Korea was in post-war situation. NARRATOR: After fleeing to Canada, Jacey’s father was able to sponsor his family. In 1988, Jacey returned to Korea and married. In 1991, she left her marriage and returned to Canada. JACEY CHAE: I realized then that I am no longer Korean, Korean, and I think that’s when I truly made the commitment. I would only now visit Korea as the land that I was born in. This is my home and now, once I have taken that journey and came back in 1991 is when I became a true Canadian. I can actually say our mom would be proud. She said she wanted to raise two girls who can survive on top of a mountain with no food. Well, they certainly, you know, achieved that. Just by bringing us to Canada. To be Canadian is to have freedom to do whatever you want and whenever you want. Okay, this is the Jays’ dugout. Freedom for me to speak whenever I want without being shut down to say what do you know? You’re a

My Home and Native Land: Huy Lam

Posted October 21st, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada
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NARRATOR: My home and native land: Personal stories of coming to Canada. HUY LAM: If things go bad in Canada and you’ve got to run out of Canada, there’s nowhere else you can go because this is the end of the line. NARRATOR: Huy Lam, photographer, emigrated from Vietnam in 1979 at age 9. HUY LAM: Do you mind if I photograph you? NARRATOR: In April 1975, the war in Vietnam came to an end. More than one million people left Indochina. Half of these refugees were Vietnamese. HUY LAM: Anybody that wanted to get out tried to get out and the most common way was through boats as refugees. We got on the boat and we left. And as we left, there was a government boat chasing us. And it was pretty rough waters because, you know, you’re on the run and stuff like that and everybody got seasick. And then by early morning, they had stopped chasing us and we were basically out in the open waters. NARRATOR: After several days at sea, they arrived on a refugee island off the coast of Malaysia. HUY LAM: There were a lot of people that got robbed from pirates and drownings and … you name it, it happened. NARRATOR: The Lams were fortunate to be sponsored by a Canadian family. They arrived in Canada in November 1979 where they were greeted by their sponsors. HUY LAM: After they picked us up from Hamilton, they drove us to St. Catharines where they had a house basically prepared for us. And it was a little townhouse and it was furnished and, you know, it was all prepared for us and there was

Most Asians and Blacks immigrate to Canada and then send some of their salaries back home. Should White?

Posted October 3rd, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

(continued)

Canadians like me be angry about it? Some of my salaries flow back into the Canadian economy, some of which then flows into their salaries only to be sent overseas and never to return to the Canadian economy again. This is draining the Canadian economy and the hard works of White Canadians like me. What should White Canadians like me do about it? Protest to the government?