Palm Beach County Recognizes Refugees’ Plight - Students designed Posters Using theme “Real People, Real Needs”
Public Affairs - (561) 434-8228
June 16, 2009
Strength. Determination. Perseverance.
Those qualities will be celebrated on Saturday, June 20, in Palm Beach County and throughout the world, as the Florida Department of Children and Families’ Office of Refugee Services joins in recognition of World Refugee Day.
DCF’s Office of Refugee Services helps refugees gain economic self-sufficiency and social adjustment within the shortest time following their arrival into the United States. For the first time, Palm Beach County will join Floridians and others around the world in the annual World Refugee Day celebration, recognizing the plight of more than 30 million refugees who have fled their home country or have been internally displaced because of fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership in a social group, or political opinion.
The World Refugee Day Work Group invites everyone to Forest Hill High School’s cafeteria on Saturday, June 20, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. for a celebration that will include a Girl Scout flag ceremony, local proclamations, children performing cultural dances, musicians of varied heritage sharing their traditions and keynote speaker, Boynton Beach City Commissioner and former refugee Jose Rodriguez. A Venezuelan refugee also will display his paintings, and local students who competed in the UNHCR World Refugee Day Poster Contest will be recognized. The students – elementary, middle and high school – designed posters on the theme, “Real People, Real Needs.” The school is located at 6901 Parker Ave., West Palm Beach.
Throughout the month of June, the Palm Beach County Library System will display books about refugees, post a bibliography of such stories on its Web site, and host relevant storytelling and other activities for children and adults. The West Palm Beach Public Library also will host storytelling focused on refugees, and the Barnes & Noble book store at CityPlace is showcasing books about refugees.
Florida’s Refugee Services Program partners with several agencies and organizations to provide adult education, case management, child care, youth and family services, job skills training, employment, health services, legal services, interpretation and integration assistance. The Community Liaison (Miriam Bracero-Rosario in Palm Beach County, (561- 837-5022) collaborates with community-based organizations, the school district, the community college, libraries, adult literacy programs, government agencies, law enforcement and others addressing the needs of refugees.
For more information, please call Lesline Alexander-Gregory, Project Transition-Adult & Community Education, at (561) 687-6370.