Bangladeshi students want to give back to the Windsor community - Action News
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Windsor

Bangladeshi students want to give back to the Windsor community

The Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association (BWSA) is made up of international students from Bangladesh that aim to give back to the Windsor community and create a home away from home for new students.

The Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association is looking for volunteer opportunities throughout the city

The Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association launched in 2017. (Tahmina Aziz/CBC News)

Bangladeshi students in Windsor are looking to give back to the community through volunteer work.

The Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association (BWSA) first began as a way of providing assistance to students coming from Bangladesh to Windsor by helpingthem create a home away from home.

The BWSA launched in 2017 to connect current students with new ones making the move.

Members help new students by assisting them with their search for housing, jobs, as well asby alleviating some of their homesickness all challenges members faced before.

Tara Das is the president of the Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association. (Tahmina Aziz/CBC)

"I think language barrier is an issue," said Tara Das, president of the BWSA. "If English is not your first language... you won't feel comfortable.... It's a cultural shock, which we're trying to mediate."

Now, Das wants the group to expand and give back to the community by connecting the BWSA to volunteer opportunities on- and off-campus.

Shahin Rana Masud, vice-president of the Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association, says students often feel homesick. (Tahmina Aziz/CBC)

"Us, as international students, are getting so much from Canada and in Windsor," Das explained.

"So, if we don't go out there and help the community, I think we're not doing justice to the opportunity that we have been given."

He added thatit's important for international students to get involved in the community because "ithelps them learn the culture."

The group is looking into volunteering at different centres, including blood banks, homeless shelters and retirement homes.

Md Nayem Hossain is the the external marketing director with the Bangladesh-Windsor Student Association. (Tahmina Aziz/CBC)

Md Aashique Rahman, general secretary with the BWSA, says it's difficult for students moving to a new country.

"We don't know anything basically about the country where to go when I'm sick, the gym, the malls, the grocery stores," he said.

"Students from my country don't know anything about it and they're very shy to express themselves."

Canada is the third country in which Rahmanhas studiedoutside of Bangladesh.

Md Aashique Rahman, the general secretary of the BWSA, says it's difficult for students moving to a new country and learning the culture. (Tahmina Aziz/CBC)

Shahin Rana Masud, the group's vice-president, and Md Nayem Hossain, the BWSA's external marketing director, describe Bangladesh as a "family-oriented" country.

They hope to provide that sense of family to their new members.

The group currently has 150 members, but they hope to attract even more this year.