Migrants fashion themselves new careers in Italian design

Ukrainian refugee and jewellery designer Yuliia Dobrohurska (left) adjusting her creation worn by a model at the Refugees Live Fashion Show in Rome on Jan 20. PHOTO: REUTERS
Ukrainian refugee and jewellery designer Yana Kozlovska adjusts her creation on a model at the Refugees Live Fashion Show in Rome on Jan 20. PHOTO: REUTERS
Gambia refugee and jewellery designer Ousman Thorp (left) with a model at the Refugees Live Fashion Show in Rome on Jan 20. PHOTO: REUTERS

ROME - Less than two years ago, 35-year-old Yuliia Dobrohurska was fearing for her life under the threat of Russian bombings in her Ukrainian home town of Konotop.

Now she is dreaming of a career as a fashion jeweller in Italy, the country where she has taken refuge.

She wore some of her creations on Jan 20 as she walked down the catwalk of the Refugees Live Fashion Show, organised by a Rome health authority, alongside professional models.

The event presented eight outfits and matching jewellery made by refugees.

It concluded a six-month course for 19 women and men who escaped war, violence and human rights violations, and now aspire to become fashion designers.

Ms Dobrohurska sees boundless opportunities opening up before her after the show.

“I can’t imagine what I can’t make and what I can’t do here in Italy,” she said.

During the course organised by the Maiani fashion academy in Rome, she learnt engraving, wax casting and embossing techniques to make jewellery.

She will now start an apprenticeship at a jeweller’s in the Italian capital.

The Maiani academy is part of a network of 110 organisations which uses the motto “culture is health” to promote the integration into employment of asylum seekers and refugees from 95 countries through arts and crafts.

While a career in high fashion may be a glittering final goal, the courses were above all an opportunity for the migrants to integrate into Italian culture and learn the language while seeking an outlet for their talents.

The Jan 20 show offered the chance to “showcase the beauty of these products made, designed and produced by the refugees”, said psychiatrist Giancarlo Santone, who works with the Rome health department that organised the event.

“We are really pleased because we have seen the results on the health of these people who are victims of war and extreme violence,” he added.

“The benefits are really remarkable.” REUTERS

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