The long journey of Faith Igogo: Mother who fled Ukraine with family steps across UNB grad stage - Action News
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New Brunswick

The long journey of Faith Igogo: Mother who fled Ukraine with family steps across UNB grad stage

Igogo arrived in Canada in December 2022 after a months-long journey fleeing Ukraine, and now she is officially a University of New Brunswick graduate.

'We had to make a lot of sacrifices,' says Igogo, mother of 3 young children

A smiling woman in a graduation cap and gown posing with a faculty member on a stage.
Faith Igogo is seen here accepting her diploma at her recent graduation ceremony, an emotional moment that had her reflecting on the past few years and her former life in Ukraine. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

It's been a tumultuous few years for Faith Igogo and her family.

That's why walking across the stage at her University of New Brunswick graduation ceremony is a moment for the books.

"It's been a journey," she said. "I pushed myself extra hard. We had to make a lot of sacrifices.

"It was filled with lots of emotions."

Igogo and her husband, Shadrach, and their two sons, Ivan, now almost four years old, and Viktor, now two, arrived in Canada right before Christmas 2022. And since then, they have welcomed a daughter, eight-month-old Eliana.

The family fled Ukraine because of the warand faced difficulties during the process. They got separated for some time, and Igogo had to give birth to Viktor in a bomb shelter in the basement of a Ukrainian hospital.

A smiling woman with braided hair in a bun and dangly pearl earrings.
Igogo completed a masters degree in health at the University of New Brunswick, but not without challenges along the way. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Before the war, Igogo was completing her UNB master's degree in health, online, from their home in the western Ukrainian city of Ivano-Frankivsk. She's a pediatrician and had planned to move to Fredericton on her own once the pandemic settled down.

After a months-long attempt to get to Canada, the family arrived and was embraced with open arms by their new community. But the struggledidn't end.

Igogo said that prior to arriving, Viktor was already seven months old but didn't have any proper health screening because of the family's circumstances. Accessing a pediatrician in her new community wasn't an easy feat, and Igogo heard from other newcomers who experienced similar challenges.

The ordeal inspired herto change the focus of her master's research.

Igogo began interviewing newcomer mothers about their experiences accessing the health-care system. She soon learned that families faced long wait times, even for important prescription renewals their child had started prior to moving.

She said some interviewees also faced culture shock, expecting the Canadian health-care system to be better off than intheir home country.

WATCH | See Faith cross the stage:

Two years ago, she gave birth in a bomb shelter. Now, she's a university graduate

12 days ago
Duration 1:55
Faith Igogo and her family fled Ukraine because of the war, arriving in Canada just before Christmas in 2022. The journey was long and difficult, but Faith did not give up. Newly graduated from the University of New Brunswick, she now has plans to use her degree in the health-care sector.

But Igogo said there are a lot of options put forth by the government to enable better access to health care theyjust isn't properly communicated to newcomers. She would like to see families be given pamphlets upon arrival in Canada with all of the necessary information about where to go, who to talk to and what options there are besides the emergency room.

And now that Igogo has finished her degree, she hopes to continue her work and make a tangible difference in the health-care sector.

A man and a woman sitting on a red rug with two young boys on their laps. They are sitting in front of a lit-up Christmas tree.
The Igogo family is seen on Christmas Day 2022 in Fredericton. They arrived just days before the holiday after a journey that took months. (Submitted by Faith and Shadrach Igogo)

It's a rewarding feeling for Igogo,who went from starting her degree four years ago in Ukraine to being handed herdiploma in Fredericton.

There were several moments, she said, where she wanted to give upbut didn't crediting her husband for pushing her to continue.

"He believed so much in me, even at the times that I felt like, 'No, I couldn't do this,'" she said.

"He was like, 'Faith, I know you, and if there's anyone that can do it, it is you.' And he said that to me on the graduation day too: 'I told you [you] were able to do it.'"

But the moment was also bittersweet for Igogo, as the memories ofgraduating with her medical degree came rushing back.

As much as the family tries not to focus too hard on what is happening in Ukraine, they are cognizant of the fact that many of their family and friends are still thereand that people they know have gone to war and not made it back.

"That's home for us," she said.

"I really look forward to going back someday, taking my kids, because for Ivan and Viktor, that's their home, that's their nationality, that's who they are, it's who they identify as Ukrainians.

"It breaks our heart to see that things are still the same way, but that's a huge part of our lives, and we can only but keep praying for peace to be restored."

With files from Jeanne Armstrong