Toronto Star: Girl, 8, pleads with Ottawa to help reunite with her mother, stuck in Gaza: ‘Please Canada, try your best to help me’

Standing beside a podium in a roomful of adults, Joury Alyazji begged Canada to help her reunite with her mother, who is still trapped in war-torn Gaza.

“This month is Ramadan and my mom is not with me,” said the eight-year-old girl, with the microphone held tightly in her hands.

“I wish that every time when I wake up, I can see my mom. And I wish Canada can help me to bring my mom. I cannot be alone. I’m trying my best to speak English. I am trying to do everything to bring my mom. I wish Canada can help me. Please Canada, try your best to help me please.”

On Thursday, Joury was speaking at an Ottawa news conference to call on the federal government to urgently reform and speed up the special immigration program launched in January 2024 to provide temporary refuge to Palestinians with relatives in Canada.

Ottawa has capped the intakes for the program at 5,000 applications, which have since been filled, but many applicants are still stranded inside Gaza, unable to submit biometrics for screening or in Egypt awaiting processing.

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Advocate Matthew Behrens said to date, only a fraction of the applicants have arrived under the program, even though Israeli border authorities have allowed Gazans’ departures at the request of foreign embassies of refugee-receiving countries.

The Immigration Department said due to factors beyond Canada’s control, leaving Gaza remains extremely difficult, posing a significant obstacle to the continued processing of applications. Anyone looking to come to Canada must still meet all admissibility and eligibility requirements, including biometrics and security screening.

“We understand that this can be challenging for residents of Gaza, but these requirements are necessary to ensure the integrity of our immigration system and the safety of Canadians,” it told the Star.

As of Dec. 31, 2025, around 1,890 people who exited Gaza and had temporary visa applications in process were able to submit biometrics, complete their application, and have been approved to come to Canada — 970 have arrived.

Joury’s father, Qasem Alyazji, said they had to make the difficult decision to leave behind the girl’s mother, Doaa Nashwan, who was the only person in the family without biometrics prior to the temporary visa applications.

“I am deeply grateful to Canada for saving my children’s lives, but my family is not whole,” said Alyazi, flanked by his three children.

“My wife, the mother of my children, was not evacuated with us not because she chose to stay behind, not because we wanted to be separated, but because she was unable to complete biometrics under impossible conditions during the war.”

New Democrat MP Jenny Kwan, who has been assisting Gazan families, said Ottawa needs to reform the special program to ensure transparency accessibility under conflict conditions and equitable processing, along with comprehensive settlement supports to facilitate employment, education and health-care access once the applicants arrive Canada.

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