- Joined
- Jul 29, 2021
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@So Fresh my sunni muslim often AIDS-tested sherdogger.
These are the type of immigrants that every country wants. People who show their surroundings that they can be counted on in the big social equation. People who have the desire to learn a new language and become part of the rest of us. People who bring new skills to jobs that are needed. Not the cleaning jobs we create in Sweden to hide the worst unemployment numbers of MENA Sunni Muslims.
Elena commutes 460 kilometers to learn Swedish: "Hope to get a job as a nurse"
https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/v...enska-i-umea-hoppas-fa-jobb-som-sjukskoterska
Elena Mordovskaya worked as a nurse in Ukraine before coming to Sweden. Now she lives in Storuman and commutes 460 kilometers round trip four days a week to learn Swedish.
- I want work as a nurse or assistant nurse, says Elena Mordovskaya.
There are a total of 20 Ukrainians with different experiences of jobs in healthcare who are taking Umeå municipality's vocational preparation language course "Vårda Umeå".
The course takes place on site in Umeå every day of the week except Wednesday, when the students have the opportunity to work remotely.
After barely three months in Sweden - now Marina from Ukraine has got a job as an electrical engineer
https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/d...re-manader-i-sverige-fick-jobb-som-elingenjor
She fled the war in Ukraine with her two children and came to Sweden at the beginning of March. Now, after barely three months in the new country, Marina Verovchuk has started working at Sweco in Borlänge.
- I am happy and happy and did not expect to get a job so quickly, she says.
Together with her two children and two other women with children, Marina Verovchuk disembarked in Nynärshamn at the beginning of March – tired and worn out. They came via Poland and had left the war-torn country. Marina's husband, who is an army doctor, had to stay - like all other men over 19. Marina's life literally changed overnight. From a life where she worked as an electrical engineer, she became a refugee. But after barely three months in Sweden, she has started a new life. In June, she was employed by the Sweco group at the office in Borlänge.
Nikolaj fled the war in Ukraine - now works at a nursery garden in Stångby
https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/skane/nikolaj-flydde-kriget-jobbar-nu-pa-plantskola-i-stangby
It was quickly possible to pair Nikolaj Stepankin with work at the nursery garden in Stångby outside Lund. A week after he arrived in Sweden from wartime Ukraine, he had received a job offer.
- For me, it means that I can disperse my thoughts and get food on the table for my three children, he says.
SVT Nyheter Skåne already met the Stepankin family when they arrived at the port of Ystad at the beginning of March. They had then fled Kyiv through Poland and received help from a volunteer association to get a bus to Sweden. Men between the ages of 18 and 60 are currently not allowed to leave Ukraine - but those who have three or more children are exempt from that requirement. The family had then left both their home and their flower business in ruins behind them. Now they live in Vallkärra in northern Lund and Nikolaj was quickly offered a job at the nursery in Stångby.
- I was told through contacts that there were a couple of people who fled Ukraine who had previous experience with cultivation. It fits perfectly because we always need extra labor in the spring when there is a lot of planting of our trees, says Johan Wiese at the nursery.
For Nikolaj Stepankin, the job at the nursery school in Stångby not only means money to support the family, but also something that takes his mind off what is happening in his home country.
Inna Stepankina, who is married to Nikolaj, was also offered a job at the nursery, but as their three children have not received school or daycare yet, she has to stay at home with them.
- We hope it will be resolved soon. The children need to get out and find other things and my wife too, says Nikolaj.
These are the type of immigrants that every country wants. People who show their surroundings that they can be counted on in the big social equation. People who have the desire to learn a new language and become part of the rest of us. People who bring new skills to jobs that are needed. Not the cleaning jobs we create in Sweden to hide the worst unemployment numbers of MENA Sunni Muslims.
Elena commutes 460 kilometers to learn Swedish: "Hope to get a job as a nurse"
https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/v...enska-i-umea-hoppas-fa-jobb-som-sjukskoterska
Elena Mordovskaya worked as a nurse in Ukraine before coming to Sweden. Now she lives in Storuman and commutes 460 kilometers round trip four days a week to learn Swedish.
- I want work as a nurse or assistant nurse, says Elena Mordovskaya.
There are a total of 20 Ukrainians with different experiences of jobs in healthcare who are taking Umeå municipality's vocational preparation language course "Vårda Umeå".
The course takes place on site in Umeå every day of the week except Wednesday, when the students have the opportunity to work remotely.
After barely three months in Sweden - now Marina from Ukraine has got a job as an electrical engineer
https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/d...re-manader-i-sverige-fick-jobb-som-elingenjor
She fled the war in Ukraine with her two children and came to Sweden at the beginning of March. Now, after barely three months in the new country, Marina Verovchuk has started working at Sweco in Borlänge.
- I am happy and happy and did not expect to get a job so quickly, she says.
Together with her two children and two other women with children, Marina Verovchuk disembarked in Nynärshamn at the beginning of March – tired and worn out. They came via Poland and had left the war-torn country. Marina's husband, who is an army doctor, had to stay - like all other men over 19. Marina's life literally changed overnight. From a life where she worked as an electrical engineer, she became a refugee. But after barely three months in Sweden, she has started a new life. In June, she was employed by the Sweco group at the office in Borlänge.
Nikolaj fled the war in Ukraine - now works at a nursery garden in Stångby
https://www.svt.se/nyheter/lokalt/skane/nikolaj-flydde-kriget-jobbar-nu-pa-plantskola-i-stangby
It was quickly possible to pair Nikolaj Stepankin with work at the nursery garden in Stångby outside Lund. A week after he arrived in Sweden from wartime Ukraine, he had received a job offer.
- For me, it means that I can disperse my thoughts and get food on the table for my three children, he says.
SVT Nyheter Skåne already met the Stepankin family when they arrived at the port of Ystad at the beginning of March. They had then fled Kyiv through Poland and received help from a volunteer association to get a bus to Sweden. Men between the ages of 18 and 60 are currently not allowed to leave Ukraine - but those who have three or more children are exempt from that requirement. The family had then left both their home and their flower business in ruins behind them. Now they live in Vallkärra in northern Lund and Nikolaj was quickly offered a job at the nursery in Stångby.
- I was told through contacts that there were a couple of people who fled Ukraine who had previous experience with cultivation. It fits perfectly because we always need extra labor in the spring when there is a lot of planting of our trees, says Johan Wiese at the nursery.
For Nikolaj Stepankin, the job at the nursery school in Stångby not only means money to support the family, but also something that takes his mind off what is happening in his home country.
Inna Stepankina, who is married to Nikolaj, was also offered a job at the nursery, but as their three children have not received school or daycare yet, she has to stay at home with them.
- We hope it will be resolved soon. The children need to get out and find other things and my wife too, says Nikolaj.