NASW NEWS
NASW Member Plays Key Part in Training
Refugees to Help Rebuild Ravaged Land
"To return, people needed to know how
to prepare," Ross-Sheriff says.
By Lyn Stoesen, News Staff
As a group of 28 returning refugees were being
trained as community caseworkers in Kabul, they were becoming
the first cadre of Afghan paraprofessionals to deal with
the needs of their war-ravaged country.
Fariyal Ross-Sheriff played a key part in
the process. During her most recent trip to Afghanistan,
in September, she helped train the caseworkers and prepare
them for the challenging, important work ahead.
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| Illustration:
John Michael Yanson |
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Ross-Sheriff has long been involved in addressing
refugee concerns. Raised in India, she earned degrees in
Michigan and Maryland. She has taught at Howard University's
School of Social Work in Washington, D.C., for 16 years,
specializing in displaced populations at both the national
and international levels. She also has expertise in research
methodology, Muslim families in America and special populations
including women, the elderly and youth. She served on the
NASW Press Social Work Research editorial board from 1998
to 2001.
Preparing for the future. Ross-Sheriff
also has a long history of working with Afghan populations.
She traveled to Pakistan in 1989 to work with Afghans in
refugee camps and those who had self-settled. In 1998, she
returned with the organization Focus Humanitarian Assistance,
a nongovernmental emergency relief agency, to assess the
needs of refugees.
During the 1998 trip, she developed focus
groups with Afghan leaders as well as representatives from
special population groups, such as women and the elderly,
to explore the resources they required. As a social worker,
Ross-Sheriff said, her goal was to "empower Afghan leadership
and support them."
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