"I am retired.
I want to learn to speak English to communicate with everyone and communicate with my neighbors."
So sayszar Mohammadghorbanian, an immigrant from Iran who's lived in Canada for nine years, per the CBC.
She's been attending English-as-a-second-language classes at the Newmarket Welcome Center Immigrant Services in Canada's Toronto area for two years.
"There is a lot of sightseeing," says Mohammadghorbanian, who visited Ottawa after her daughter invited her to live with her.
"The multilingual central communication center had 27,257 calls answered, 1,741 interpretations in more than 14 languages, and about 47,833 at the EarlyON center."
Mohammadghorbanian is one of more than 20,000 people who visit the Welcome Center's 24 information and orientation sessions per year, as well as 14,000 students who attend language classes and 2,000 clients who visit appointments with associate partners, per the Canadian Press.
The nonprofit Social Enterprise for Canada, which runs the Welcome Center, provides career accreditation, child care, employment, language services, and more for immigrants, as well as helps them " navigate the pathway to get their credentials here in Canada that will be commensurate with their country of origin," CEO Darcy MacCallum tells the Toronto
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