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Aurum Award winner Igor Yushchenko brings Ukrainians to safer lands

2023 Aurum Award winner Igor Yushchenko (LLMā€™12) is applying his legal expertise to help fellow Ukrainiansā€”including his own familyā€”seek refuge in Canada.
Yushchenko sits at a desk in his law firm with his hands clasped and smiling slightly in a suit and tie.

Posted: May 26, 2023

By:Ā Allison Barss

ā€˜Donā€™t give up.ā€™ It sounds simple, but itā€™s a tough lesson that Ukrainian native and Halifax-based lawyer,Ā Igor Yushchenko (LLMā€™12), has learned throughout lifeā€™s hardships ā€” and continues to apply to what lies ahead. ā€œObstacles will happen, but when you overcome them, you learn a valuable lesson,ā€ he says. ā€œComing to Canada has taught me this.ā€

Growing up in Ukraine, and following in the footsteps of his hard-working, successful parents ā€” both accountants ā€” Yushchenko dreamed of a career in law. ā€œI wanted to be a crown prosecutor ā€” to put bad guys in jail and make the world a safer place,ā€ shares theĀ Aurum AwardĢż°ł±š³¦¾±±č¾±±š²Ō³Ł.

After earning his bachelorā€™s and masterā€™s degrees in law in Ukraine, he landed a crown attorney placement in Kyiv, but quickly learned it wasnā€™t a right fit. ā€œI saw a lot of police brutality in that role, and realized Iā€™d rather protect people from that.ā€

New beginnings

Looking to further his education in law and explore a new country, Yushchenko arrived in Canada in September of 2011 to study at »ĘÉ«Ö±²„, where he eventually earned hisĀ Master of Laws degreeĀ in 2012.

It was an eye-opening time, he shares. ā€œCompared to my studies in Ukraine ā€” where if a professor tells you to do something, you do it and you donā€™t ask questions ā€” I chose subjects and professors I enjoyed at Dal, and actually talked to those professors. It created a sense of trust and openness. That was life changing.ā€

With a plan to return to Ukraine after earning his Dal degree, Yushchenko says he experienced second thoughts. ā€œThatā€™s when someone told me I couldnā€™t practice law here in Canada; that Iā€™ll face challenges getting my license. Something inside of me said to prove them wrong.ā€

Yushchenko made the decision to settle in Halifax, earning his license to practice law, creatingĀ Ā ā€” specializing in real estate, corporate law, personal injury, civil litigation and immigration ā€” and marrying and starting a family with his »ĘÉ«Ö±²„ sweetheart (which he says is his greatest accomplishment).

ā€œThat was the hardest thing,ā€ he says. ā€œDenying that itā€™s impossible, accepting that it wonā€™t be easy, and facing the challenges that may lie ahead. But, still striving for the life you know you deserve.ā€

A harsh reality

Over ten years after settling in Halifax, the news of Russiaā€™s invasion of Ukraine in February of 2022 shook Yushchenkoā€™s world.

His family was in Kyiv when things started. ā€œI wanted to get them out as fast as possible,ā€ he says. ā€œIt took three or four days for them to cross the border, and no sleep. But they are now here in Nova Scotia. They are safe.ā€

But Yushchenko felt he needed to do more. ā€œIā€™m a lawyer, I know about immigration, so I knew I needed to use my experience ā€” my knowledge ā€” to help others.ā€

Yushchenko is focused on writing with a pen on paperwork at a desk in an office setting.

He quickly joined forces with Halifax-based lawyer, Jason Woycheshyn, and worked with the Nova Scotia and Canadian governments to create new programs to help expedite Ukrainian immigration. ā€œFor the first three or four months, the phone didnā€™t stop ringing,ā€ shares Yushchenko. ā€œAnd even once those families left Ukraine, many kept calling to talk to us, asking for recommendations on where to settle, what jobs to look for.ā€

Over a year after the start of the war in Ukraine, Yushchenko ā€” like many of us ā€” says he hopes things will be over soon. ā€œThere will be a massive amount of work needed to help rebuild that country,ā€ he says. ā€œLawyers will be needed, and I want to be a part of that team. I am ready.ā€

Yushchenko adds that itā€™s his drive to help others that keeps him going. ā€œI feel like I can provide the motivation that [prospective immigrants] may be missing,ā€ he says. ā€œI want others to see me as an example ā€” to see that as an immigrant, you can still achieve anything in this life. Living your ideal life is not a club for only blessed and chosen people. Itā€™s a message I share with my children, too.ā€

ā€œEveryone has the right to shape their future, so donā€™t give up. Knock on every single door. Eventually, one will open.ā€