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Report transcript in: Shama; A Pillar of Strength in the Community in Times of Covid19
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Shama; A Pillar of Strength in the Community in Times of Covid19
Please Report the Errrors?
Hi, Sharma. Thank you so much for joining me today.
Um, I'm really appreciative of you, you know, taking out your time.
I know you're a busy woman,
so I really am grateful for, you know, you giving me this opportunity.
Um, pleasure.
Maria. Thank you. For,
um, as soon as you mentioned what you were doing, I just couldn't help.
And I thought, No, it's definitely something I'd like to
be part of, so thank
you. Glad. Thank you so much.
All right. So as we mentioned before, um,
when we were having lots of other conversations, but
I think the main thing, I mean oh, well, let's start off with your introduction.
If, um, if you just give a little snippet of, um,
an introduction of yourself, that would be good.
Yeah, sure. So, uh, my name is
I am
a tutor in the local community. In one of the centres,
I specialise in health and social care subjects
and child care related subjects.
Excellent. Thank you.
Um, so yeah.
So, basically, today,
we're just gonna have a conversation about how you think like COVID-19 has affected
affected you affected.
Um, I suppose the Asian community at large in your experience as well.
So it would be really nice to hear from you
I to be honest, I can't even believe a year has gone by.
Um, can you?
And I think it was in January when we started hearing a little
bit about Covid and I have a younger brother who lives in China.
He works in China,
you know,
and he was telling
us
what's happening
time.
We did not imagine for it to come Me here.
I used to speak to my students, and I used to be telling them My brother's um
there's this virus and let's just clean our tables but within,
uh,
it
got
closer.
So we didn't we that it was
a lot getting very, very serious.
But, um, in terms of being different stages to it like, OK, you know,
there there there was a lot of fear.
There was a lot of fear. There was a lot of panic within people as well.
There was a lot of confusion,
Um,
but I would say from this
in November December time we found people that
we personally started losing loved ones as well.
That's when I think it hit everybody
it's, uh,
for I think, not just mine, but for a lot of people
you can do
to say that it had has had
an impact on our
mental
well being and obviously physical well being as well, it has made a huge difference.
Um,
but yeah,
I mean,
I mean, how how was that with your brother being in China at the time.
So, um, he's he's he's he teaches that,
um,
brother who was visiting him at that time.
Um, so there was that little bit of a panic of what's happening.
The brother who was visiting, he did manage to get back,
um, and then with the younger brothers and, uh,
been a lot more stricter,
and he was constantly trying to video call us and telling us that this is really,
really serious.
Um, it's not being exaggerated in the media. How people are,
um, you know, setting these rumours and we all need to be
really, really careful.
But I think it was, um,
in March when we had the first lockdown and I still remember the day
I had a feeling that I think we all have
that feeling that there was something leading up to,
um, a lockdown, didn't we?
And that's when all the
supermarkets and people were going
getting all the buying.
And I had a
I I noticed a decline in the students attending classrooms.
There were
I did let students know if anybody feels that they having any
you've got. So
I saw that that massive,
um, cut down in the attendance,
the students. But then I think it was on the 23rd
of March when it was
officially and I was.
Then
it was like, Right, OK, we're going going home.
Um, and at first it thought, OK, maybe it's gonna be about a week.
Two weeks seemed all right.
Like, OK, we're going to be safe, but, uh,
stocked up on food and things just to kind of like,
get us through for a while. But
I think after then you start doing a
Saturday Oh, don't normally get a chance to do tidy and go
and do loads of jobs that we normally do
and did all that.
I think we tried all the recipes in the world. Didn't we, in the first locked down
the
entire nation did on
social
media
sharing?
Um,
all
these.
We did.
We did.
And it was nice to spend time with the Children as well. But then it was like,
Ok, now,
now
it started getting a bit
boring, but
yeah, it's been a bit up and down, and I now and I was speaking to a friend the other day,
Mary and I said,
Do you remember when we had Boris Johnson when he did the first announcement and
there was something said about be prepared to start losing your loved ones?
And that was last
year in March. Do you remember?
I
Yeah, and I was like, Whoa, you know, this is a bit scary. But now,
um, when I see I've known people personally lost family friends,
not family friends.
I've had friends who have lost
students
that I know personally, how it's affected them. But
now it's like, Yeah,
it was.
It hasn't It's been awful.
Um, in terms of my own personal personally, my own well being,
I
think the
only way of kind of coped is when, um
OK, you don't bother to go home and for
a few weeks, and then I thought, OK, well, what we're going to do
and Then I realised that working in the community
I mean, I thought we still got a roof over our egg.
We've still got food on the table, but straight away,
I thought of a lot of families in the community that I usually work with.
We used to come to the same time. It was like a second home to them.
Um, they used to come and do courses. They used to be a lot of projects.
They just made friends. And
I thought, Well, how are they going to cope?
Um, and that's when I
spoke to one of my managers and set up a food bank last year
and then started
every month. That was still doing,
and it was just to try to help people and
set
up a
group chat for a lot of the students because
they were a bit confused of what was happening.
Um, I set up a group chat for a lot of people in the community who used to use the centre
just to keep in touch with them.
So they felt that there is somebody there just to give them updates.
And if somebody just if they just want to
pick up the phone
and we use that group. Um,
things like started doing things like healthy eating.
Um, so there was every week I was doing, like, a hot topic.
So things like healthy eating. And then there was one for e safety because
there were Children at home that were using the computers a lot
more And how to make sure that your Children are staying safe.
There were things like fraud.
There was a lot of frauds that were going on, and I think they still do a lot of online,
Um, just make you doing a lot of awareness.
Oh,
my God, that's fantastic, you know, to to
to set up something that is so like,
intrinsic in that kind of, Um
Well, it it was just so necessary, wasn't it? In a way, because it helped them
be in connection with other people.
Um, especially because if they're,
you know, if they've been struggling anyway
to make friends or what have you and then that was like their second home.
Then all of a sudden, it's just gone.
Where does that leave them?
So I I think that's been quite good, but we've had
a lot of elderly people that used to come and
use the centre as well.
And I remember up until the last day they didn't have a clue with what was happening
and they were attending the English classes.
And one of the tutors called me and she said,
she said,
I don't think they know with what's happening.
Um, and I walked in and she said,
Do you want to explain and tell them about covid and like and?
And I kept and I was
thinking
about
how come
they still still attending classes?
This was just before we went into the official lockdown
and I walked in and I said, Um, so I translated and I said,
Do you understand what's happening?
And they said, No. They said, Is it a festival? Is it some
people that have happened?
There's people everywhere in the
And I said, and I looked at the
doctor and I said they actually don't know about the
the virus and
covid and what's happening
and bless them. They were just, uh,
absolutely,
which shocked.
And then after a short while, uh, how how does it look this corona,
how how does it look?
And I explained. We have sat here. I just
touched the table. It could it could be here. I could have transferred it.
And this is how dangerous it was. And that's when they realised.
And they cut their cost for short and thought right, You need to get home.
Oh, my days. Oh, my God,
That's such a big responsibility as well. Like to
to make
people understand, like the
the, uh you know how it can affect so severely as well.
We have a
lot of
families in the community that I work with, um,
who are here through the refugee or asylum.
And there was one family who had just arrived in the UK just a couple of months,
and we were still in the process of supporting them,
trying to get the Children into getting their school places.
So they didn't really have
much of a chance to even settle.
And they were just and then suddenly the country went into lockdown.
So there was a lot of all that confusion they didn't have a TV,
but trying to keep in touch with individuals
in the community and reach out to people,
Um, as much as what we can do.
And I think
that has helped quite a lot.
Um, but just like simple things. Like I had one lady who said
they didn't have a t VA t
There was, um just like dropping off some games at the door for
the Children just to keep them occupied.
But I think the groups that we'd set up, um, they were really, really good.
They were just a chance to just talk about a lot of things. Um, we talk.
Did a lot of work on mental health as well, sharing tips on what we can do,
Just keep ourselves techniques
that we can't do, like, go out, go for a bit of a walk. Um, even the,
um, the government guidelines changing it is
trying to make sure that those were reaching out and giving those updates
to people in the community
as well, so that they've got access to languages
that are,
you know, that meets their language needs. Yeah.
So you are, like, an information point Almost, weren't you?
Yeah, but we've never had to
do it because
it's
been on,
like, face to face, hasn't it?
Um, and then now it was like working from home. But to be honest,
it it was good
because
it was exhausting sometimes because I've got my own Children as
well,
although we're doing all our own well being as well.
And you feel a bit selfish sometimes doing that. But you could.
There were other team members as well, who stepped in, and
we all just contributed to Like, I when we were doing the food
banks,
we had, um, some young people from the community. They came and volunteered.
They said, Oh, we'll we'll do the deliveries
So
we are a
group of
family and friends. When they heard we were doing this as well, they came.
Stepped in, contributed.
Um, there was somebody who was providing warm meals.
Oh, that's amazing
that throughout lockdown and then we had celebrations like Eid Festival as well,
where it was a lonely time for a lot of people, wasn't it?
Especially when you used to.
For many, um,
festivals Christmas people have not been able not been able
to celebrate them like I normally would have had.
So there has been a huge
definitely, I mean, I mean Eve. If I if I tried to remember back like you say
it was the night before. Really? Wasn't it that we everyone got told?
Oh, it's locked down again.
And it was like, Oh, well, what what's gonna
be?
I been out shopping.
We'd all We were all prepared because we haven't seen our families for so long.
Um,
but I've spoken to people, and, you know, we just miss, like, hugging our friends.
We didn't realise that,
you know how
we used to take it for granted meeting people and having a coffee.
And
it's we've kind of it has affected
people a lot.
So So how have you managed to look after your own mental health during all of this?
Um, my own by working with
just doing some voluntary work in the community, trying
to keep myself busy.
Um,
I think, but I I'm not going to say, you know, it's been all good. I It hasn't.
It hasn't.
Sometimes it I I
I have had times where
I can't carry on anymore. I'm used to being there, seeing people face to face.
We have that routine getting
meeting
family friends.
Um, what groups and doing the community work that we do,
uh, to try to. That's helped quite a lot
apart from that. I think it's only been, um, the last
couple of months start trying to go out for walks a bit more.
Um,
but yeah, I do find that
we are a little bit limited, but on the other hand, trying to have a look at the
good side of things, it's like a lot of us, like our our have neighbours and
usual, hello, eyes.
But this was a time since lockdown where I found got closer to neighbours,
Um,
so that people, the kindness or the kindness in people
where they're there to support each other, just knocking on people's doors, asking
neighbours like if you need anything, the elderly Look,
I'm going to the supermarket if you need anything,
and
that was nice to see people getting together.
Um, I've got two teenage Children there at home as well,
and trying to be there for them as
and making sure supporting their well being
and their studies from home as well.
So it hasn't been really easy, but we've just had to cope, haven't we? And
how to get through
that time
And Kirkley, we've had high rides. We have, haven't we?
And I remember for a short period of time,
we were allowed to start teaching classes face to
face and as provided that we have social distancing.
And, uh,
when I had a message come through that somebody who a good
friend a lady would would know for many years had passed away
from COVID.
And that's when we realised you know what it is getting closer and closer.
It's just pick picking people up.
You know who
could be a
Yeah,
So
yeah. God, Yeah. It's definitely goodness you've had a lot on your plate. I mean,
like, you say, it's been the case for everyone, really, hasn't it?
Everyone's been in similar boat.
Um, but I mean, from what it sounds to me like, is that you really
managed to find an avenue through, like, community work and
and, you know,
reconnecting with those Perhaps that you it was just like
a little way of hello and bye kind of thing,
so that there's definitely been a lot of,
like positives coming coming out from that as well.
Um, in and amongst all of the kind of grief
it
appreciate a lot of things I think?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think it made us appreciate a little bit. I think things we were going so fast.
Um
and I like I constantly working. We've got the Children. And
now it's like, OK, you know what? It's been a little bit of a step back.
And luckily, technology has been great with some friends. Uh, rather than before.
It used to be just a quick call and looking, you know,
I see you then or sometimes months would go by,
wouldn't
fine.
But now what I did start to do with, uh, like,
it's fine. Let's just have a video call. Let's just see how you do it.
I know it's not the same. Um, but just be taking that time out and just be there for
others as well and time to connect a bit more with each other.
Oh, that's fantastic to hear.
That's really good. Thank you so much, Emma, for sharing.
You know,
your whole experience and all of the things that you've been going through.
Thank
you.
Sorry. I could go
on.
And
that's good. That's good. I'm so glad, you know. Um, but yeah. Thank you again.
So much for that. Really, really valuable.
Thank
you. Thank you very much.
No worries. We stop the recording, then
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