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mal was zum thema krieg...

dies hat eine lehrerin aus der detroit area in ihr online journal geschrieben.
es macht kich einfach nur sprachlos...und es macht mir angst..
Ebony (angiej) wrote,
@ 2003-03-24 16:46:00
Current mood: crying
Where Have All The Muslims Gone?
Remember Ali, the Iraqi student I wrote about a few weeks before leaving for Italy when telling about going to the antiwar rally?
He's gone. Disappeared.
His parents' phone number is disconnected.
His mother cannot be reached at work.
His father disappeared first... and now, one of our babies is gone!
His counselor said to me this afternoon: "Either the parents have been called in by the government for questioning, or else they've all fled."
Oh, my God.
Just three weeks ago...
Miss Thomas, can I please have more time on this essay test? My father's gone and I had to get a job to help at home.
Sure, you can come here during your lunch hour and work on it.
Thanks. I really appreciate it.
He didn't let me down. He came. He did good work. But the last week that I saw him, it seemed as if he couldn't concentrate. His usually interested face seemed to slump; his bright brown eyes were dull. (Teachers, at least good ones, notice these things.) I kept asking him if everything was okay. He assured me that it was, and that he appreciated me asking after him.
But now he is gone.
I spent most of the next hour crying. I was absolutely hysterical. Thank God my students were in an assembly. Some of the other teachers tried to console me, saying they likely fled to Canada when our local news reported that all Iraqi nationals and Iraqi Americans in the Detroit area were being questioned by the FBI. Saying that I *couldn't* think they'd been detained or deported... that I couldn't think the worst.
Even if we are starting to notice that a few of our Middle Eastern students and parents and neighbors are disappearing. Another teacher said that my story made her realize she hasn't seen a certain Palestinian student for three weeks.
The Detroit area has the largest concentration of Middle Easterners outside the Middle East, and one of the oldest Arabic-language and Muslim communities in the country. The Nation of Islam began here, too...
And now, people are scared.
I'm scared.
There were other countries in history where people of certain ethnic groups disappeared without a trace, without protest from those who were once their neighbors.
Speaking of history, I was informed by my assistant principal that it likely wouldn't be a good idea to get certified in history... as there is now a statewide initiative to take all social studies out of the core curriculum save for American History and to replace it with foreign language. While I applaud global language learning, I was shocked at this news. World History has already been removed from our state curriculum on the K-12 level... you have no idea how hard it is for me to teach these kids Shakespeare or comparative mythology when they don't understand *anything* about other countries.
And as of Friday all faculty and staff have been ordered by the district (which gets its directions from the state, which gets its directives from the US Department of Education) not to speak against the war or the government in the presence of our students. Not asked, ordered.
Something is being done to our nation deliberately, something sinister... something horrible.
When more than 50% of Americans say that the First Amendment goes too far...
When more than 60% of Americans feel that not only is this war just, but that to speak against it is a treasonous crime...
When more than 70% of Americans feel that only people of certain races, ethnicities, and socioeconomic backgrounds ought to be allowed access to higher education...
And when a child named Ali who met Saddam Hussein and then fled his regime in the dark of night, who saw his uncles murdered before his eyes, when all that child ever wanted was to learn how to read and write good English, and to be accepted in a country called America...
Too bad no one ever told Ali that America wasn't for people like him.
And so, he is gone. A red line has replaced his name in my gradebook; an empty seat marks his place in my classroom.
A classroom where the American flag has a place of honor.
A classroom where I looked at the American flag today and raged at it, and at the republic for which it stands.
Once, I thought that the republic was governed for the people and by the people.
Today, I realized that people are the very last thing that this republic cares about.
one nation
under God
indivisible
with liberty and justice
for...
The question remains unanswered.
And wherever my young student is, I hope he's safe. I hope he's got enough to eat. I hope he can find a good school and continue to learn. I hope that he remembers what I strive to teach all of my students, that there is love in the world, that every man and boy is your brother, and every woman and girl is your sister, and that in the eyes of eternity good always, always prevails over evil.
I hope he finds a nation more worthy of him and his people than America is.
Bisherige Antworten

und eine antwort darauf

bison
2003-03-25 12:09 (link)
Inshallah Ali is safe and sound wherever he may be.
I'm an Iraqi "refugee" from the UK. A similar thing happened to my cousin around a month and a half ago in America. He lived in Houston at the time. The US immigration authority approached him and told him that they were performing "routine" checkups. Asked for his documentation which he gave freely and without hesitation (everything as far as he was concerned was in order, he had all the documentation to prove he was allowed to live and work in the US.) Next thing he knew; he was taken to a "concentration camp" that was full of middle-eastern refugees/nationals (Majority Iraqis, Some Syrians, a few Iranians, etc) He told me the camp is overcrowded; kept very cold at night, you are given a single thin blanket, 2 meals a day and you sleep on the floor. Everybody at the camp had been detained in similar circumstances to my cousin; (immigration authorities came to take them away after willing cooperation and documentation provided.)
The documentation was removed and kept by the authorities. His rights stricken; not allowed to see a lawyer until a few days later. Within 10 days he was sent on a plane back to the UK; his money, possessions (Car, flat, computers, furniture, etc) left behind. He came back with nothing but the clothes on his back. His lawyer is unable to do anything for him (I'm not sure exactly why she couldn't.)
I wrote this factual piece in my LJ at the time. I didn't have the words to express what I felt; the injustice of it all. It made me wonder whether my family and I are safe here in the UK; only a few years ago my grandfather's entire pension fund (around £20,000) held in an offshore UK bank was "sanctioned"; it was neither allowed to go to him, nor to his daughters (one of whom is my mother) who are UK citizens. My grandfather is 82 years old and needed that money; he had/has nothing to do with Saddam; the only reason for the indiscriminate sanctioning was that he was Iraqi.
My story isn't the only one like this; your story certainly isn't. As a Muslim, Arab, Iraqi, Brother...no as a Human I truly feel for Ali and his family. I thank you for raising my hopes that there are people, especially teachers out there like yourself.
Thanks.

Oh mein Gott

Ich hoffe nur, daß das, was ich da grad gelesen habe, nicht wahr ist! Auch wenn ich mir in den letzten Tagen auch schon so meine Gedanken zu dem Thema gemacht habe. Wenn man sich daran erinnert, wie die Amerikaner mit den Japaner umgegangen sind im 2. Weltkrieg, dann kann man sich leider denken, daß diese Geschichte stimmt.
In was für einer Welt leben wir eigentlich?????
Grüsse von einer geschockten
Angel

Unglaublich!

Wie war das nochmal- Land Of The Free?! Wo wird das hinführen? Grüsse von einer traurigen, je länger je mehr desillusionierten Anna
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