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The Impact of MegaMarie and The Human Safety Net in Switzerland

The Human Safety Net for Families programme in Switzerland supports the Marie Meierhofer Institut für das Kind. The Institute works with parents of children up to six years old, living in a vulnerable context, by providing parenting advice and promoting learning through play at home.

The MegaMarie space offers a creative environment for children and a platform for parents to share educational insights. The MegaMarieplus programme aims to empower family centres across Switzerland, benefiting around 24,000 parents and children by 2025.

We have talked with care worker Amina about the people she has met at the MegaMarie space and how the centre could have helped her when she first arrived in Switzerland as a refugee.

Amina, MegaMarie is a place where people from different cultural, social and linguistic backgrounds come together. How are they able to communicate with one another?

Yes, when thinking about all the different people who come – Swiss-born children and parents, families from various countries who have often only just arrived, plus the children from the Zurich Federal Asylum Centre, who we also bring over here – you’d think that would be a real problem. It rarely is. Children tend to communicate using gestures and facial expressions – whether that’s in the sandpit, painting or during our afternoon snack, and they seem to be able to connect that way.

You came to Switzerland from Afghanistan as a refugee over ten years ago. How does your personal experience influence the work you do at MegaMarie?

After having my first child shortly after arriving in Switzerland, I was very lonely. I knew so little about being a mother and would have loved to do a German-language course, but I couldn’t afford childcare. At the time, I longed for a place where I could have met and connected with people in similar situations. However, I only came across something like this years later while looking for a job, and that was MegaMarie!

The Human Safety Net is dedicated to supporting initiatives like MegaMarie aimed at people who experience hardship. What are the families that come to you like?

It varies – depending on where they are from and on their background. For certain people with a migrant background, I often take on the role of a confidant, because I speak Farsi, Turkish and Hindi. Hence, both adults and children will often tell me about their tragic experiences. Even though I understand where they’re coming from because of my own experiences, I still often don’t have any answers for them – for example, when they want to know when they will finally get a residence permit.

Can doing crafts, painting or playing at MegaMarie make a difference in the face of such trauma?

Yes, definitely! Let me tell you about a refugee family from Afghanistan that was housed at the BAZ Federal Asylum Centre. To start with, the whole family was just incredibly relieved to have finally reached safety. However, the longer they lived at the BAZ, the more unsettled and restless the children became, which was noticeable whenever they visited us. BAZ is cramped and loud, and there’s not much privacy. Hence, the family’s visits to MegaMarie became a valuable respite from all of that. I also sometimes made them Afghan tea to make them feel more at home. So, I am convinced that, sometimes, little things can make a huge difference. 

In addition to refugees, MegaMarie is also an important space for Swiss families who experience hardship.

That’s right. There are a lot of families from within the region who visit regularly. One of them, for example, is a dad with a young daughter who lives outside the city and often joins our morning art sessions to paint together. The dad recently shared just how therapeutic these carefree mornings with his daughter are for him. Many socially disadvantaged families don’t have the space or the financial means for any creative activities at home. 

You have now been working at MegaMarie for nearly two years. How has this work impacted your life?

When I get up in the morning, I don’t think of MegaMarie as ‘work’ – because the centre makes me and others so happy. Hence, I just automatically have a smile on my face when I greet parents and children. And at other times, it also makes me think of where I was when I first arrived in Switzerland, and where I am now.