Red Deer Advocate, March 21, 2016

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CANADA DOWNS USA AT CURLING WORLDS

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SAUSAGE MADE SIMPLE

IN PHOTOS: SLED DOGS BONEFIGHT COMPETITION

M O N D A Y

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TENSIONS HIGH DURING ENERGY EAST HEARINGS

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Threads of hope HAND-WOVEN RUG RECOUNTS HISTORY OF AFGHANISTAN BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF

Asdolah Khierandish’s hand-woven rug tells a story of horror and hope. It recounts his history, as well as that of his wartorn homeland. Khierandish, a master rug weaver from Afghanistan, designed the artistic carpet on display at the Red Deer Museum and Art Gallery as part of an exhibit about the Central Alberta Refugee Effort. It was the best handiwork Khierandish brought out of his country when fleeing from the Taliban, along with wife and three young children, in 2008. Like the family, the rug survived a long and perilous journey through Iran, Turkey and Syria before finally arriving in Red Deer in March, 2012. Yet this one-of-a-kind weaving was the item Khierandish later chose to donate to a CARE fundraiser. There’s an Afghan saying: When you donate something, give the best you have, said the rug maker, who wanted to express his gratitude through this gift for the assistance provided by CARE and other organizations during his family’s passage to Canada. The tapestry-like carpet, purchased by the Allard family of Red Deer, was woven in red-dyed wool, symbolizing those fighting for freedom in his country. Slim, broken bands of blue denote hope for a better future, said Khierandish. Arrow-like symbols represent people joining together, while a band of barbed-wire symbols represent Taliban oppression in Afghanistan. “It’s a jail,” said Khierandish, who nearly lost his life recording destruction in his village. He was two years old when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979. At age nine, Khierandish was sent to become a rug-weaving apprentice. See RUG on Page A8

Photo by ASHLI BARRETT/Advocate staff

Defenceman Kayle Doetzel of the Red Deer Rebels and Ben Carroll of the Edmonton Oil Kings collide in the corner during their Saturday night WHL tilt at the Enmax Centrium. The Rebels defeated the Oil Kings 7-2. See related story on Page B1.

‘THIS IS REAL LIFE HAPPENING HERE’! FAMILY DESCRIBES BABY’S BIRTH ON HWY 11 BY LANA MICHELIN ADVOCATE STAFF When his pregnant daughter called for a ride, Doug Brown thought he’d have time for a cup of coffee before driving her to the hospital. Mother Nature proved him wrong. Tiffany Brown “had three contractions by the time we got to the Alberta Springs Golf Course,” recalled Doug, who ended up delivering his grandson on the side of Hwy 11 at 4:45 a.m. on Jan. 9. Doug had taken on hospital driving duty because his daughter’s partner, Chris Foster, was still apprenticing as a millwright in Lloydminster when Tiffany went into labour. The young couple believed there would be plenty of time until the birth, since their second child wasn’t due until Jan. 23. But there wasn’t time. “This isn’t supposed to happen,” Doug remembers thinking, after his daughter said, “’Dad, I think the head’s coming’… “I thought: Oh dear god, here we are. This is real life happening here!” Doug recalled.

RED DEER WEATHER

INDEX NEWS: A2,3,5,7,8 COMMENT: A4

The outside temperature was -25 C when he pulled off the dark, mostly empty highway. He parked his truck near the entrance to the golf course and called 911. Although Doug remembers being calm “because I had to be,” he appreciated hearing what to expect from emergency dispatcher Alanna Robertson. “She said get a good hold of him, (the baby’s) going to be really slippery when he comes out,” Doug recalled. All it took was one push by Tiffany, and Doug was holding his newborn grandson, Owen — who is brother to Patrick, age 20 months. After the infant started breathing and crying, Doug wrapped him up in his jacket. Robertson told Doug to use one of his shoelaces to tie off the umbilical chord about six inches from the baby’s belly — and then to wait for the ambulance to arrive. Tiffany and her newborn were taken by paramedics to hospital, where Owen weighed in at seven pounds, three ounces. There were no birth complications. Ten weeks later, mom and baby are doing so well they wanted to thank Robertson in person for her assistance. Along with Grandpa Doug, the whole Syl-

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Tonight

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XXXXX Snow

30% flurries

60% flurries

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SPORTS: B1-4 ENTERTAINMENT:B9 BUSINESS: A9-10 CLASSIFIEDS: B6-7 COMICS: B8

Photo by Lana Michelin/Advocate staff

Red Deer emergency dispatcher Alanna Robertson meets Baby Owen, his mother, Tiffany Brown, and his grandfather, Doug Brown, who helped delivered the baby at the side of a road in Sylvan Lake. van Lake family met the emergency 911 dispatcher in Red Deer on Saturday to express appreciation. See BABY on Page A8

LOTTERIES SATURDAY 6/49: 1, 10, 11, 12, 19, 27, bonus: 29 Western 6/49: 2. 4 .6, 7, 42, 43, bonus: 25 SUNDAY Pick 3: 207 Extra: 3820461 Numbers are unofficial.

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