|
Region
Service center celebrates 10 years of helping refugeesPublished 10/04/09
BALTIMORE - Khada Upreti was 19 when the Bhutan government imprisoned him and other members of a Nepali-speaking ethnic minority group. Three months later he was released and fled to Nepal, but wound up in a refugee camp with thousands of other Bhutanese.
Sixteen years later, a U.S. government program brought Upreti, his wife, and three children to the Baltimore Resettlement Center to start a new life in a country that was initially unfamiliar and bewildering.
"I was facing a lot of adjustment problems. Communication, shopping, everything was new for me," he said. "So this office helped me start my English classes, job...
|
| #1 - City restrictions force Sunday Capital delivery delay (29 comments) |
| #2 - Digging out from the Blizzard of 2010 (16 comments) |
| #3 - Home of the Week: The transformation of an ugly duckling (14 comments) |
| #4 - Officer released from jail (12 comments) |
| #5 - Drinking & Driving (9 comments) |
If you encounter other problems, please email ewiffin@capitalgazette.com and include your name, username, and any errors or messages that are displayed. The more information you can provide, the better able we will be to assist you.
In order to post or vote on a comment, you must be signed in with a hometownannapolis account.
Take a look at a summary of Commenting Guidelines.
If you encounter other problems, please email ewiffin@capitalgazette.com and include your name, username, and any errors or messages that are displayed. The more information you can provide, the better able we will be to assist you.