Ericky’s Story

Refugee Action spoke to Ericky, a volunteer Asylum Guide, who trained as part of their Navigating Asylum Partnerships project, funded by Comic Relief. This is Ericky's story.
Ericky

Micro Rainbow has partnered with Refugee Action on a three-year project to ensure that asylum seekers are fully informed as they begin their asylum journey in the UK.

Our beneficiaries are LGBTQI asylum seekers who have recently arrived in the UK, seeking safety after fleeing persecution in their country of origin. Many asylum seekers continue to face barriers in the UK as they struggle with the unfamiliar language, culture and the complex asylum system. In order for asylum seekers to be granted protection, they need to have a full and fair chance to tell their story. To do this they need to understand the asylum process and their rights within it.

With this project Micro Rainbow trains community volunteers (Asylum Guides) on the asylum system and pairs them with newly arrived LGBTQI asylum seekers. Asylum Guides provide LGBTQI asylum seekers with information and guidance on the asylum system. Empowered with information and knowledge about the process, asylum seekers have a fairer chance to build new, safe and independent lives. In this article one of our Asylum Guides talks about their experience of the project.

Experts by Experience share their stories

Refugee Action spoke to one of our volunteer Asylum Guides, who trained as part of our Navigating Asylum Partnerships project, funded by Comic Relief. We wanted to understand why they become experts by experience, what they have learned during the process, and what they want people reading the case study to learn. Ericky tells his story.

Ericky is still going through the asylum process, seeking protection from his home country, Tanzania, where it had become impossible to live freely as a gay man without fear of persecution. He trained as an Asylum Guide to give others the practical and emotional support he received from partner organisation Micro Rainbow.

Ericky’s journey

You think you know a lot about the asylum process through reading the newspapers, but it is not like that at all! It wasn’t until I started going through it, that I really found out what it was about.

I came to the UK as a Travel and Tourism student. I did a diploma and wanted to go on and do an advanced one, but my father passed away, funds stopped, and I couldn’t continue.

When I went home to Tanzania for the funeral the situation was much stricter than when I had left. Muslims and Christians used to live in harmony, but when I returned there was just two extremes, nothing in the middle. As a gay man, you could just be ‘outed’ on social media without any proof, and you become a target.

I returned to the UK, and found a small London charity, C4WS. When I explained to them my situation and my sexuality, they put me in touch with Micro Rainbow.

Micro Rainbow

Even in the UK, it’s still hard if you don’t know the right places to socialise – apart from drinking, gay pubs, or discos – there is not a place to go and talk about your feelings.

At Micro Rainbow, it was the first time I met people like me without having to explain! They all understand what you are going through. Micro Rainbow gave me somewhere safe to live. It is good because I was worrying about this.

Now I help new arrivals settle in, find the local food banks, explain how to register at a GPs [doctors], and to be prepared for a long wait [as they go through the asylum system.]

I started volunteering, getting to all the group meetings – like yoga, dance – early to set up. Then I trained as an Asylum Guide.

Delight at helping people

There are a lot of Asylum seekers who don’t know a lot of things like they can register for a GP for free or get certificates to help with prescriptions for medicines.

One man, who was not well at all, needed a dentist, but thought he had to pay. I explained he could get help through a certificate. He had no idea! He had been suffering for weeks. He went to a job centre to get the certificate and managed to get the treatment.

Sometimes you think you can’t help much, but you’d be amazed. 

Complex asylum system

The system is very complex. When I went for my main interview they said, ‘Why did you not claim straight away? Well, first, you don’t know where to start. Second, the fear – I was afraid they might put me into a detention centre, and I might get harmed there by homophobic residents.

C4WS and another charity, Praxis, explained what the situation is, how you can get protected, and said – we will be with you all the way. That is how I got courage to go to Croydon and claim asylum.

That was two years ago now. I only just had my interview, and that is only after working with a wonderful legal aid solicitor to push my case for me. There is a lot of waiting. I’ve learned to use the time looking after my health and using evidence for my case.

After joining Micro Rainbow, training as an Asylum Guide, and reading a lot I knew my interview would be brutal, very long. I was expecting 6 hours, but it was only 2.5! So, this is one thing I now say to new people; prepare for the worst, and it will help you.

Being an Asylum Guide

It helps you both – you and the person you are helping. Sometimes, you think you know a lot because you have been waiting longer. Someone new with different experience brings something to help you. You share experiences, and you learn a lot from them, and hopefully they learn from me.

What volunteering as an Asylum Guide means for Ericky

You help someone, and straight away you see the impact. Filling in forms for accommodation and seeing them have somewhere to live or helping them get an ASPEN card [to help pay for food and provisions].

You see them when they are destitute, then you see them grow in confidence, asking questions about what to do, building their own case. Then, when they are granted asylum, you have seen the process from the beginning to the end.

It helps you a lot, because not only do you learn how to help someone, but through the training you learn some aspects that also work for me. So, you learn how to help others, but also how to help yourself as well. I am going to give my time a little bit more; at least they can have their voice from someone who has actually been through it all.

This article also appeared on The Refugee Action Good Practice website.

Do you have a moving on enquiry?

Related

Sanctuary at The Walthamstow Wetlands

Sanctuary at The Walthamstow Wetlands

This activity, dancing at the Wetlands, allows LGBTQI asylum seekers and refugees to use their bodies to express themselves and to heal past trauma. Micro Rainbow’s social inclusion programme is a key element of our holistic approach to integration.

Group of people

Tips for interpreters working with LGBTQI asylum seekers

The process of applying for asylum as an LGBTQI person can be very daunting, especially for those who may also be struggling to communicate in a new language. Interpreters have an important role to play in asylum claims and this article explains how.