Aug 03

Les Voix migrantes: 30 juillet, 2012 Migrant Voices: IWC Radio Jul 30, 2012

Un travailleur mexicain raconte son travail comme boucher, jusqu’à 80 heures par semaine dans des conditions de travail esclavagistes. Son patron possédait ses papiers d’identité et contrôlait son compte en banque. Ce dernier l’empêchait de chercher des soins médicaux.

Lorsqu’il a quitté son emploi après trois ans, son patron a refusé de lui rendre son visa de travail, ce qui l’a obligé à travailler sans statut légal à Montréal. Il décrit sa situation comme étant “mille fois plus abusive qu’aux États-Unis” où il avait travaillé sans papiers pendant plusieurs années.

“Si là-bas on vous donne dix dollars, ici on vous donne cinq ou quatre, et on vous traite moins bien … et parfois le désespoir oblige les travailleurs à se soumettre” dit-il.

Son message à d’autres travailleurs im/migrants met l’accent sur l’importance du Centre des travailleurs et travailleuses immigrants pour les personnes qui viennent chez nous cherchant du soutien.

“Que dieu les aide  … à garder la tête haute et apporter leurs plaintes au Centre au métro Plamondon” dit-il. “Ces gens ont beaucoup d’expérience, et peuvent vraiment vous aider.”

Les Voix Migrantes est une compilation de témoignages des gens qui sont venus au Canada en tant que travailleurs et travailleuses (im)migrants.

Veuillez partager ces histoires avec vos amis. Ces émissions seront archivées sur notre site-web, où vous pourrez également soutenir via PayPal notre travail .

Part 1:

Part 2

In this special hour-long edition of Migrant Voices, a Mexican man recounts his experience working as a butcher for up to 80 hours per week in slave-like conditions. His boss controlled his immigration papers and bank account, and denied him access to health care.

When he quit his job after three years, his boss refused to relinquish his temporary work visa, forcing him to work without legal status in Montreal. He describes this experience as “a thousand times more exploitative than in the United States,” where he had worked without status for many years.

“If over there they give you ten dollars, here they will give you five, or four dollars, and they will treat you worse … and sometimes the despair forces immigrants to bow down,” he says.

His message to other migrant workers speaks to the importance of the IWC for the people who walk through our doors seeking support.

“God willing … that they keep their heads up and bring their complaints to the Immigrant Workers Centre at Metro Plamondon,” he says. “These people have a lot of experience and can really help you.”

With Yumna Siddiqi, Noé Arteaga, Aadi Ndir, Viviana Medina, Sarita Ahooja and David Gordon Koch.

Special thanks to James Goddard and Gab Aubry for their production support.

The Migrant Voices project is a collection of audio testimonies about the experiences of people who come to Canada as im/migrant workers. These testimonies are archived at iwc-cti.ca/migrant-voices-iwc-radio.

Please share these stories with your friends and encourage them to donate to the IWC to support our work.

(Download: part 1, part 2)

Related Posts

Quebec Declares War on Workers: IWC Denounces Anti-Labour Bill 89

89 as an outright attack on working-class power and a gift to corporate bosses. Passed in defiance of mass opposition, this legislation criminalizes collective resistance, muzzles strike action, and threatens every worker’s basic human right to organize and fight back. “This is class warfare. Bill 89 isn’t reform — it’s repression,” said Mustafa Hanawi, community organizer with the IWC. “Immigrant and precarious workers are being pushed further into silence, exploitation,... Read more →

Mass Protest Shuts Down CANSEC Over Israel-Gaza Genocide Allegations

Ottawa,  Hundreds of demonstrators have blocked access to CANSEC, North America’s largest weapons and military technology expo, in protest against what they call Canadian complicity in the ongoing genocide in Gaza. The protesters gathered early this morning at the entrances of the EY Centre in Ottawa, confronting delegates from Canadian and Israeli arms companies and military officials. Their message: end the arms trade that enables mass atrocities. Among the demonstrators... Read more →

Status for All: Migrant Women Resist Invisibility and Demand Dignity

As part of the World Social Forum of Intersections (FSMI), the Committee for Human Rights in Latin America (CDHAL) and the Women’s Committee of the Immigrant Workers Centre (IWC/CTTI) came together to organize a powerful workshop on a reality that is too often ignored: the lives of undocumented women in Canada. To be a woman, a migrant, racialized… and without status.What does it mean to live through this triple marginalization... Read more →

Chicoutimi hosts awareness evening on migrant labour issues

Chicoutimi, May 28, 2025 — This Wednesday at 6:30 p.m., the Marguerite-Tellier Hall at the Chicoutimi Library will host an evening of information and reflection on the realities faced by migrant workers in Canada. Organized in collaboration between Amnesty International Canada Francophone and the Immigrant Workers Centre (IWC-CTTI) of Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean, the event aims to shed light on systemic injustices experienced by thousands of migrant workers. On the program: Introduction to... Read more →