Who were the immigrants? Where did they originally lived before they came to Canada? What were their occupations there? My father, Christopher Sy, was born on the date of January 25, 1969 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Throughout the early childhood of my father, him and his family lived in the middle class apartments in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. In their household, my father was an only child who lived with my grandparents and my great uncle. For the occupations of the adults in my father’s family, my grandfather worked as a shoe manufacturer, my great uncle worked as an accountant, and my grandmother stayed at home to supervise my father throughout his early childhood. During most of the early 1970s, my father …show more content…
What was happening in their home country at the time of immigration? How did they leave their home country? From the year 1967 to 1975, the country of Cambodia was experiencing major political tensions, as the Kingdom of Cambodia was engaged in a civil war against an infamous Cambodian communist party, known as the Khmer Rouge. After experiencing several catastrophic events of violent bombings that were instigated by the evil Khmer Rouge Party, my father and his family were determined to leave Cambodia on the date of April 17, …show more content…
With the fact that my great uncle lived as a resident in Calgary and possessed a Canadian citizenship status, it provided my father and his family with the opportunity to reunite with my great uncle. Stated earlier, my father and grandparents immigrated to Canada through sponsorship by my great uncle. Not only did my father and grandparents immigrated to Canada to reunite with my great uncle, but to also experience and live a lifestyle that was superior compared to their previous experiences in Cambodia and Vietnam. Compared to the previous countries that my father and his family has lived in, Canada was significantly more superior. This was due to the fact that Canada contained adequate living stands and conditions,job opportunities, education, health care, safety from persecution, and a respectable government with meaningful laws that could be followed. In addition, these factors were seen to completely turn the life of my father and his family into a positive direction. As life in Canada seemed more desirable than the life in Cambodia and Vietnam, it was absolute that my father and his family decided that Canada would be their new