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Thirty years ago I came to this country as a refugee. We had nothing. Not even enough money to buy a microwave or a jacket.
My family and I were refugees. We fled our home in Kuwait when Saddam Hussein invaded the country in 1990. In the process, we left everything behind. I remember the day my dad spent his last five dollars to buy me a rotisserie chicken on our way to a refugee camp in Jordan.
He didn't eat anything for days afterwards.
When we got to LA, much to the embarrassment of my mother, I wrote a letter to the mayor of our small city. In that letter, I laid out the story of our escape from Kuwait, the months we spent in various refugee camps, and our eventual arrival to LA.
I shared the shame of poverty. Pulling out food stamps at the grocery store. Bright red shorts because that's all I could afford. The laughter of children because it had to be borne. I talked about how my highly educated parents couldn't find any work except at fast-food restaurants and convenience stores. But they chose to come here anyway. Because this is where they believed they could make it.
The Mayor shared my letter with the local evening news. They embarrassed my mother further and came to interview me. Donations flooded in. Toys, clothes, books. Food. A microwave. A jacket.
Yet, at the same time, we were threatened and harassed by our neighbors. Because you see my name wasn't always Ehsan Zaffar, it was Ehsan Hussain. And many thought my family and I were related to Saddam Hussein, the same man that their sons had gone to fight overseas.
They torched our car. Broke our windows.
We were too poor to move. All we could do is change our very identity. Their ignorance and threats forced my dad to change my name - like the millions of immigrants before me.
And then, eighteen years later, we elected Barack Hussein Obama as the President of the United States. And I went to work for him.
This is the story of America: Unending generosity. Stunning bigotry.
It is STILL the story of this country.
Today, through this pandemic, thousands of Americans are risking their very lives to cure, feed and clothe us. Many are working for free. But millions are also going hungry. One out of ten Americans don't have enough to eat anymore. And those people who threatened my family? Their bigotry now informs government policy.
My childhood, writ large, is the fate of many Americans.
But it doesn't have to be. We only need to tell the first part of this story.
Vote.
Vote so that we learn to love and accept others again. Vote so that when another young refugee comes to this country, she doesn't have to change her name.
Director, Visa Acceptance Solutions: Payments, FinTech, Fraud Solutions
2 年Thank you for sharing your story. History is repeating itself and I do see many generous neighbors willing to welcome and give a helping hand. What is harder to spot are the aggressions that are still a very dangerous issue. I hope that holding up a mirror to the community with stories like this will remind us to do better every day and in the polls.
US Department of Homeland Security
4 年Just reading this. WOW - the details make your story all the more powerful. No wonder you care so much about issues related to civil rights, inequality, and representation. I know you'll be making a real difference in your new position!
Financial Analyst
4 年I took a workshop you gave five years ago and was thoroughly impressed. You have come a long way and continue to inspire. Powerful narrative!
activist
4 年People often forget that the effects of war cause a refugee crisis. Sometimes authorities are so eager to start a war, but at the same time unstable regions may become more chaotic with increased militarized regions. Thank you for sharing this story, and America often shows us the devils and the angels side by side. It's only time, that allows for angels to increase.
WRITER/EDITOR / HUMAN RESOURCES SPECIALIST, CAREER and LIFE TRANSITION COACH, AUTHOR, SPEAKER, BLOGGER
4 年Your story inspires me. May you continue to Inspire many others. God bless you today.