Natasha's Blog
Wednesday August 11, 2010
Torontoist.com: Natasha Fatah on Keeping CBC's Promised Land
Posted by Natasha Fatah
by Rodney Barnes
CBC Radio's new summer series Promised Land profiles individuals who were forced to flee their home countries and who chose to come to Canada--and, in many cases, Toronto. Torontoist sat down with host and producer Natasha Fatah.
(Photo by Christopher Dale)
Torontoist: Why do you think it's important to tell these stories?
Natasha Fatah: I think it's important for the CBC because we're meant to reflect what this country is. And more and more of this country is people who aren't born here and people who have to flee to get here....So I think you don't have to know about fellow Canadians, but you should want to know. You should want to know what your neighbours had to go through to come here. There's a huge amount of personal commitment that people put into coming here, and a huge amount of sacrifice, and I think it just lends itself to understanding--not just about Canada but maybe about the rest of the world.
Read the complete interview: http://torontoist.com/2010/07/promised_land.php
Tuesday August 10, 2010
CBC.ca: Coming to a new country, the price that children pay
Posted by Natasha Fatah

The Berhane family reunited in Canada: (from left) Frieta, Aaron, Eiven, Miliete, Mussie. (Mark Ulster)
Monday, August 2, 2010
Coming to a new country, the price that children pay
by Natasha Fatah for CBC.ca Viewpoint
This summer I had the chance to have dinner with a remarkable family, the Berhanes, who are originally from Eritrea.
The mom, Miliete, set the table with a mouth-watering selection of delicious East African treats, including my personal favourite, injera, the spongy bread perfect for soaking up the lentils and spices on our plates.
Meanwhile, her husband Aaron and their three children passed around the dishes and filled glasses with juice.
It was only this summer, after nearly nine years of being apart that Aaron was reunited with his family here in Canada. And that is what made that dinner so remarkable.
While working on these stories of escape from around the world for CBC Radio's Promised Land, I am reminded again and again about the hardship that people go through to come to Canada.
The physical danger, the expense, the risk to their safety and, the greatest sacrifice for many, the separation from and the impact that has on their families.
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/08/06/f-vp-fatah.html
Friday August 6, 2010
National Post: "Our Promised Land"
Posted by Natasha Fatah
Alberto Lalli, speaking with Natasha Fatah, was imprisoned and tortured in Argentina. (Mark Ulster)
Friday, August 6, 2010
Our Promised Land
by Natasha Fatah for The National Post
Take a walk down any street in one of Canada's big cities, hop on a bus or subway train, and you never know when you'll find yourself sitting beside a former South American guerrilla fighter or someone who escaped war-torn Bosnia in the back of a UN truck.
One in five Canadians was born outside this country. And many of these six million people have remarkable stories. This country is filled with people who escaped their homelands to become Canadians.
Think of the thousands of American draft dodgers who came here opposing the war in Vietnam, and then place them next to the thousands of Vietnamese boat people who fled from the opposite side of that war. The two could be your next-door neighbours. There are Eastern Europeans who came to Canada to escape oppressive Communist states, and then there are Latin American communists who found refuge here to get away from right-wing militias in their home countries. From opposition leaders in Iran, to Holocaust survivors -all have found a new and peaceful home in Canada.
But it isn't always easy to get here. Many people trying to get to Canada take on false identities, devise elaborate plans, take big risks, and sneak out past border guards.
It's the stuff of Hollywood movies, except these stories are real. All we have to do is ask to hear them. Most of the time, however, we don't.
So, I've started asking. For the past few months, I've been working on a summer series for CBC Radio One called Promised Land. It's a 10-part documentary show. Each week, we bring listeners an escape story -- escapes that started in 10 different corners of the world, but always ended in Canada.
Most of the people I interviewed didn't originally set out to become Canadians. They're happy to be here now, but for the most part they just wanted to get out of the situation that hurt or oppressed them in the first place.
That's the tricky thing about a promised land: It's about the place you end up, but it's just as much about the place you fled. Be it the Jews in the Bible fleeing the Pharaoh's tyranny, or African slaves in the American south taking the Underground Railroad -- they all sought their own promised land. A vague idea of freedom, but a concrete desire to escape.
Canada became a promised land almost by accident.
Read the whole article: http://www.nationalpost.com/todays-paper/promised+land/3365338/story.html

Max Eisen, survived the Holocaust , and he shares his story with Natasha Fatah (Mark Ulster)
Thursday August 5, 2010
Promised Land featured in The Calgary Herald
Posted by Natasha Fatah
Alberta Culture Minister Lindsay Blackett caught flack the other day when he wondered aloud why so much of the television programming his government (partially) funds turns into crap.
Hey, we didn't need the Culture Minister to figure that out.
The thing of it is, he just looked in the wrong place for original, imaginative, thoughtful content.
He should have turned on the radio instead.
That's where he'd find a new batch of summer replacement shows on CBC radio, including the best of the bunch, the excellent Promised Land.
Created by, and hosted by Natasha Fatah, Promised Land tells a single story: how people got to Canada.
They are some of the most moving stories you will ever listen to.
I've heard two episodes so far. One was about a Vietnamese family of 19 who escaped Vietnam during the war of the mid-1970's. The other was the story of Iranian exile Shahram Tabe, who had a whole Turkish prison interlude to deal with as part of his journey to Canada.
That's the thing about the stories Fatah tells so well in Promised Land: none of them go as planned.
Propelled by desperation, political chaos and usually war, whole families set off on incredible journeys, often with nothing more than the belief that where they get to (Canada) must be better than the home they are leaving.
The story about the Vietnamese family, who kept getting caught and detained in Vietnam, was simply some of the finest radio I have ever heard. It was astonishing. And Tabe's Iranian story was just about as awesome, except my Walkman's batteries died in the middle of the story, so I had to keep turning it off and turning it back on as I bladed to work last week.
And that's only one of the shows CBC Radio puts on in the summer.
There's also Re-Vision Quest, a marvellous show that deconstructs Canada's aboriginal culture, complete with comedy sketches.
There's others I haven't heard (I suspect), and all of it is the summertime replacement of Terry O'Reilly's wonderful Age of Persuasion, which is to radio what James Cameron's movies are to Hollywood: completely irresistable.
If Lindsay Blackett just listened to the radio instead of watching Canadian TV, he wouldn't wonder why he funds so much crap. He'd wonder who to send the next cheque.
Wednesday June 30, 2010
The mountains that were climbed to get to Canada
Posted by Dagna Pielaszkiewicz
By: Natasha Fatah, CBC News column
The Fatah family in 1986, a year before they arrived in Canada. (Courtesy Tarek Fatah)
Before I was born, my father was in and out of prison for leading demonstrations against Zia-ul-Haq's military dictatorship.
In his mind, and that of many other liberals, Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq was threatening to turn Pakistan from a progressive, exciting country into a conservative, dogmatic Islamic republic.
At that point, the dictatorship was winning, so for the safety of his family my father left Pakistan.
Read more »Wednesday June 23, 2010
Escape from Uganda Preview
Posted by Dagna Pielaszkiewicz
At a reunion picnic, Natasha Fatah interviews Asian Ugandans who fled their native country. (Courtesy Mark Ulster)
On the Victoria Day long weekend, at a park outside Toronto, there was a gathering of hundreds of Asian Ugandans. They had all been expelled from their native country in 1972. They had been ordered to leave by the Ugandan dictator, Idi Amin. And he had given them only 90 days to get out. Here are some of the voices from the reunion picnic.
Promised Land airs on CBC Radio One and Sirius 137 starting next Monday, June 28. The show will bring you the escape stories of people who had to risk everything to become Canadian.
Monday June 21, 2010
Escape from Czechoslovakia Preview
Posted by Dagna Pielaszkiewicz
Eva and Miso Baranik's Italian travel documents. (Courtesy Mark Ulster)
Promised Land airs on CBC Radio One and Sirius 137 starting next Monday, June 28. The show will bring you the escape stories of people who had to risk everything to become Canadian.
Alino and Eva Baranik left Communist Czechoslovakia in 1981 with their four-year old son Miso. In this preview they describe their confrontation with a Yugoslavian soldier at the Italian border.
Thursday June 17, 2010
Promised Land debuts Monday, June 28th at 7:30 p.m.
Posted by Andrea Chiu
CBC Radio One is proud to present Promised Land, a 10 part series hosted by Natasha Fatah that tells the stories of dangerous getaways as described by the immigrants and refugees who endured them to get to Canada.
To learn more about Promised Land check out these links:
"Arden, Suzuki land summer CBC Radio gigs", CBC News
"Escaping a dictator's whim", by Natasha Fatah for CBC News
Our About the Show page
You can also find Promised Land on Facebook and on Twitter.
Be sure to tune in as of June 28, 2010 to:
CBC Radio One on Mondays at 7:30 p.m., repeated Fridays at 9:30 a.m.
Sirius Channel 137 - Mondays at 6:30 p.m. and 10:20 p.m. ET and Fridays at 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. ET.
Air Times
| Network | Times |
|---|---|
| Radio One | Mondays at 7:30 p.m. (8 p.m. NT) and Fridays at 9:30 a.m. (10 a.m. NT) |
| Sirius 137 | Mondays at 6:30 p.m. and 10:20 p.m. ET and Fridays at 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. ET. |




