Date: Fri 25-Jun-1999
Date: Fri 25-Jun-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Behluli-refugees
Full Text:
Refugees Are Settling In To Newtown
BY STEVE BIGHAM
Newtown residents are doing their part to ensure that a group of Yugoslavian
refugees are made to feel at home here in town.
The 13 refugees arrived in Newtown just over two weeks ago after fleeing their
war-torn homeland of Yugoslavia. They came to Newtown -- to stay with family
members Nasser and Hidajete Behluli -- straight off an all-night flight from
the Macedonian capital of Skopije.
While hostilities have ceased in Serbia and Kosovo, Newtown's newest residents
say they are here to stay. Life in their homeland will never be the same, and
as they watch CNN at night, they know they can never go back.
Meanwhile, life at the Behluli home on Hundred Acres Road is starting to
return to normal as the group prepares to move into two apartments in Sandy
Hook. Earlier this month, there were 17 people crammed into the two bedroom
house located on the farm of Robert and Judy Holmes.
"There was a lot of cooking to do the first couple of days, but then lots of
people starting bringing dinner and lunch over," Hidajete explained. "They'd
call and say, `Don't cook tonight, we'll bring dinner over.'"
Others have called to offer both furniture and clothing.
The ethnic Albanians were each given alien numbers upon arriving in the United
States so that they are eligible to work. One man is now employed in the lawn
care business, a second is painting and a third is now employed full time at
Edelman Teddy & Arthur Limited of Hawleyville, which also employs Nasser and
Hidajete.
Learning The Language
A major challenge for the new arrivals is learning how to speak English, so
Newtown resident Ellen Parrella is leading a group of Literary Volunteers who
are tutoring the family members three times a week at the Cyrenius Booth
Library. Newtown residents Pam Dimitro, Jane Golenbock, Darlene Jackson, Ilene
Dorenbosch and Joyce Paloian are the tutors, and Al Goodrich and Mary Mitchell
provide the transportation.
More than a year ago, Yugoslavian President Slobodan Milosevic launched a
crackdown on Kosovo in an effort to rout the Muslim Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLO) and disperse the region's population of ethnic Albanians. The Serbian
government's "ethnic cleansing" policy brought death and displacement to
hundreds of Kosovars. Under an agreement with NATO, Serbian forces have now
evacuated devastated Kosovo. NATO forces have since moved in and discovered
further atrocities -- torture chambers, mass graves and poisoned drinking
water sources.
Unlike many refugees who fled their homes in Kosovo, the Behluli family's
journey began several months ago when they fled their homes in Serbia, the
home state of President Milosevic. Many Albanians in Serbia had been rounded
up and forced to serve in the Serbian army. The family members headed for the
mountains and after a harrowing 20-hour journey, finally arrived in Macedonia
where they were taken in by strangers.
They made their way to the United States after receiving sponsorship from
Nasser and Hidajete Behluli.