The Dulals and their community are aching for work to help feed and support their families. And while the Dulals speak halting English and are open to work opportunities, in this tight market they have not yet found jobs. Unless they earn money to pay for their modest housing and other basics, they face potential eviction.
Watch the video (1:50 minutes).
Bhutanese refugee men and women seek work in —
- Restaurants: cooking, cleaning, and serving
- Childcare and elder care
- Landscaping, maintenance, and other service work
- Factory assembly lines
- Bakery processing plants
- Sewing, tailoring, and weaving
- Designing and making beaded necklaces
- Henna painting
Contact us
Please send job leads and offers to BhutanBaskets@Gmail.com.
How Bhutanese refugees come to Atlanta
The refugees arrive in Atlanta and nationwide through combined efforts of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Third Country Resettlement Program and the U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program. The UNHCR also works with the U.S. and many other countries to resettle other refugee groups from around the globe.
Thank you and Namaste*
*Sanskrit greeting, meaning, I bow to you
My related posts
- Bhutanese Atlantans repurpose "the vine that ate the South" (includes video)
- Atlanta’s Bhutanese refugees and their new neighbors
- Maimonides and the Ladder of Charitable Giving
- July Fourth picnic with Atlanta's new Bhutanese neighbors (includes video)