8
8
0 1 km 0 1 km
0 1 km
1. French governmental agencies for family-supporting subsidies 2. French Office for Immigration and Integration
N
N N
Sources: Based upon an interview by E. Hellio, Marseille, February 2012. Map data by les contributeurs d’OpenStreetMap, CC BY-SA.
Vieux-Port Noailles Joliette Belsunce Jules Guesde Colbert St-Charles Réformés Le Panier Notre-Dame-du-Mont Prefecture La Plaine Vieux-Port Joliette Belsunce Le Panier Notre-Dame-du-Mont Prefecture La Plaine Vieux-Port Noailles Joliette Belsunce Le Panier Notre-Dame-du-Mont Prefecture La Plaine Saint-Char les
station Saint-Char
les station Saint-Char les station 8h30 Bakery 22h Mina Accomodation 20h Secours Catholique Free meal 11h Cimade 1000 Babords9h30 21h30 In L. Accomodation 20h Restaurant Free meal Asylum platform 5h 21h In E. Accomodation Police station 16h Street peddling 20h Free vegetables distribution 10h Porte d'Aix Informal market Toward market "chips" Les Arnavaux Toward Emmaüs Pointe-Rouge 14h French lessson 6h Prefecture 7h00 Accomodation 8h30 subsidized job as gardener 13h00 Porte d'Aix Informal market CAF1 14h30 employment pole 16h30 OFII2 19h00 Street peddling 20h Commissariat custody Chinese wholesalers
Main places where Khan went
Help from individuals : meals, accomodation, administrative assistance Community association places
Metro station Metro line Tramway line
Administrative / legal places Day job and moonlighting places Rented flat
One-day urban route Arrival phase, first 8 months : house-hunting, trying to get papers, refusal of the
application for asylum, appeal to the CDNA, learning French, help from associations and individuals.
Stabilisation phase, for the next 16 months : improving language, obtaining subsidiary protection, right to have a job, certificate of entitlement to social rights.
Setting phase : renting a flat, getting a contract of employment, family entry and settlement.
« Marseille belongs to Exile. This city will never be anything else, the world's last port of call. Its future belongs to those who arrive. Never to those who leave ! »
(Jean-Claude Izzo (1996), Chourmo, Paris, Gallimard : p 102.)