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Kanta Naik
"Abbotsford is a diverse community and continues to increase in diversity. The city is developing rapidly and sees an influx of new residents from all over the world. I believe that we all share many common ideals, beliefs and hopes. As a community, we become more accepting when we are able to celebrate that which is common among all of us before we celebrate that which is unique and different about us. As a community, we are more willing to accept and respect others when we know them better. It should be a goal of every resident to make Abbotsford a truly inclusive community."

Kanta Naik is the District Principal for ESL and SWIS (Settlement Workers in Schools) programs for the Abbotsford School District. She immigrated to Canada from Zambia in 1992 and has worked in the school district since then as teacher, vice principal, principal and now district principal.

resources

Diversity Information Flyer
English
Punjabi
Chinese
Spanish
French
Korean
German

Presentations and Workshops
If you would like us to present the Abbotsford Building Connections Project to your staff, Board of Directors, members, congregations, and leaders, please contact us.

Community Resources
Access Abbotsford
JobOptions BC Program
English Languages Services for Adults
FVRL Languages
MSA Museum
The Reach Gallery & Museum
Canadian Sikh Heritage
Aboriginal Education Center
Multicultural Healthy Living
Abbyfest
Canadian Immigrant Magazine
Qmunity
Ten by Ten challenge
UNESCO Universal Declaration on Cultural Diversity
Welcome Packages for Newcomers in English, Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Punjabi, Spanish and Vietnamese
Employment Mentors' Program for New Professional Immigrants

resources

UNESCO Coalition of Canadian Municipalities against Racism and Discrimination

First Nations, Urban Aboriginal and Immigrant Communities Dialogues

Making Young People's Voice count in Municipal decision-making and their Communities

fun facts

Did you know that in 2008, 3,185 seasonal workers came to B.C. 2,852 or 89.5% came from Mexico. Guatemala was the second largest source country with 269 (8.4%) seasonal workers.

Reference: Temporary Foreign Workers 2004 to 2008, January 2010 Factsheet. WelcomeBC