My name is Sean Des-Pres. I'm a young Black man of Haitian descent living in the City of Ottawa, Province of Ontario. Two years ago I graduated from the Police Foundations Program at Algonquin College. These days, I'm a fourth-year Criminology student at Carleton University. It's been a tough year so far. The first breath of the year 2012 has been bitterly cold in the province of Ontario, Canada. What can we do but to keep trucking, right?
Today, I find myself thoughtful. I'm thinking about the themes of friendship and family a lot. My father, Antoine Des-Pres moved to the region of Ontario, Canada, from his hometown of Cap-Haitien, Northern Haiti, twenty years ago. Living in Canada as a Haitian refugee wasn't easy for him. It took him a long time to get his Canadian citizenship. Nevertheless, my father kept going. He attended the University of Ottawa, and graduated with his Master's degree in Sociology at the age of thirty three. He was twenty five when he began attending the school, and although it took him a long time, he said it was all worthwhile. Education is everything in this life, that's something my father says a lot.
At the University of Ottawa he met my mother Astrid Saline, a Haitian woman born and raised in the City of Montreal, Province of Quebec. They fell in love, got married and had little old me. Today, my father is a social worker and my mother teaches English at a Catholic school in Ottawa's East End. My parents live in the town of Orleans, about forty five minutes from the City of Ottawa. They raised me to be a God-fearing, decent young man. I am the Vice President of the Catholic Students Association at Carleton University. Exactly one hundred and seventeen days ago, I met someone remarkable, and my life hasn't been the same.
The C.S.A. meets every week in the lounge inside the University Center at Carleton University's Main campus. There are quite a few students in it. And they come from all over. Arianna Wiseman comes from the town of Melbourne, in the Commonwealth of Australia. Kendra Jackson hails from the City of Atlanta, Georgia in the United States. My good friend Miguel Hernandez comes from the region of Cancun in Mexico. Pablo Castillo comes from the town of Madrid in Spain. Anthony Mbakwe comes from the town of Lagos in Nigeria. Christina Ahmed comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo. Amelia Chang comes from the region of Shanghai in the People's Republic of China. Michael Yamamoto comes from the Home Islands Archipelago in Japan. We've got every race you can think of in our little club. Except one.
One hundred and seventeen days ago, Asimah Abdul-Razzaq joined us at a meeting of the Catholic Students Association. The five-foot-eleven, curvy and shy young Arab woman wearing the stylish blue jeans, red silk shirt and plain gray hijab took our breath away. She was definitely the last person I ever expected to see at a meeting of Christian students. I wasn't sure what to make of her. Fortunately my good friend Heather Wilkinson, the green-eyed and red-haired Irishwoman who's the C.S.A. President, welcomed the hesitant Asimah Abdul-Razzaq with open arms.
Throughout the meeting, Asimah asked us a lot of questions. She wanted to know more about Jesus Christ. I was more than happy to tell her about Our Lord and Savior. She found it amazing that Jesus Christ, a man of God, was so respectful of women. Especially since, in the Bible, Christ went as far as defending a prostitute from some angry men. I happily told Asimah that Jesus Christ is the son of Yahweh, a God of Tolerance and Peace. Asimah sadly told us that the Allah she prayed to viewed women negatively, if one were to go by the teachings of the Prophet Mohammed.
I looked at her, stunned by this. Clearly this young Arab woman was having a crisis of faith. I had to handle this with care. There are lots of Arab students at Carleton University. I don't mean to sound stereotypical but the last thing I want to deal with is a bunch of angry, violent Arab men coming after me for 'corrupting one of their Muslim sisters' by teaching her about Christianity. Asimah's questions basically dominated our first meeting. I wasn't the only one fascinated with her. The others were too. Guys and girls, all of us Catholics were mesmerized by this tall young Arab woman who wore the hijab yet seemed fascinated by Biblical passages and stories which most Christians grew up hearing about. Apparently, Asimah knew nothing about Christianity. She only heard us referred to as infidels, that's about it.