Saturday, January 21, 2012

Would Forcing All Refugees to Settle in Oakland Solve Our Refugee Problem…or Our Oakland Problem?

 

SFC: “Now moved to the Tenderloin, Iraqi refugee Ghazwan Al-Sharif was mugged in the Fruitvale district.” Photo: Mike Kepka/ The Chronicle
 

By Nicholas Stix

The answers are “No,” and “No.”

After the passing of the Immigration Act of 1965, many businessmen got the idea that they could solve their Negro problem by importing millions of Hispanics—by hook or by crook—from South of the border. Instead of solving one problem, that only created a second problem. Immigrant Moslems have since created a third problem, Indians a fourth, and refugees make for a fifth problem.

Note the compassion Chronicle reporter Jordan Gerstler-Holton has for Moslem refugees qua refugees living in a racist, violent, black neighborhood. Millions of white Americans have endured as bad or worse at the hands of racist blacks, and yet, I don't recall ever seeing the Chronicle show them any compassion as a collective.

* * *


Refugees find Oakland can be worse than Iraq
Jordan Gerstler-Holton
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
The San Francisco Chronicle
__________________________________

After the Iraq war broke out, Ghazwan Al-Sharif went to work translating for the U.S. military - a job that paid well but subjected his family to repeated violence, including a brutal attack on his sister.

Scared for his life, Al-Sharif accepted the government's offer to come to America as a refugee, one of thousands relocated to this country since the war began. In June 2008, he moved in with two other Iraqi refugees, sharing a two-bedroom apartment in Oakland's Fruitvale neighborhood - a situation arranged by the nonprofit International Rescue Committee.

It wasn't long before Al-Sharif said he learned that there were parts of Oakland where violence rivals what he escaped in Iraq.

One night, he decided to walk home alone. Two men attacked him, bashing him in the face with a metal object and robbing him of some money, his cell phone and his ID.
He was left screaming on the ground, his face gushing blood.

He said the police never identified his attackers.
 

SFC: “Iraqi refugee Ghazwan Al-Sharif sits in his tiny Tenderloin apartment. He was relocated after attempting suicide following a mugging in Oakland's Fruitvale neighborhood.” Note the shadows: Refugees, like illegal aliens, “live in the shadows.” Photo: Mike Kepka/The Chronicle
 

Al-Sharif, 40, is one of more than 50 Iraqi refugees who have been moved to East Oakland by the International Rescue Committee. The nonprofit's officials say they won't settle refugees in unsafe neighborhoods, but Al-Sharif and dozens of other Iraqis blame the organization for exposing them to an unfamiliar type of violence - one perpetrated by gangs rather than political militants.

Al-Sharif admitted it wasn't smart for him to walk home alone at night. And committee officials say they warned Al-Sharif, and all refugees the group resettles, to heed safety precautions.

The nonprofit's officials say they've distributed flyers on safety issues, stepped up efforts to work with local police and no longer place refugees in jobs with swing and graveyard shifts. The group has stopped placing refugees in Fruitvale and other of Oakland's most dangerous neighborhoods, although some refugees continue to live in these areas. [N.S.: Note that there is no help being provided to whites marooned in such neighborhoods.] Al-Sharif has since moved to San Francisco's Tenderloin neighborhood.

Like many of his fellow Bay Area refugees, Al-Sharif does not believe the International Rescue Committee has done enough. [They’re fast learners!] "Why are you putting them in Oakland and letting them suffer?" he said, referring to his fellow refugees. "I want to be safe. ... I can find work and manage to survive, but I need to be safe."
 

Oakland as refuge

Oakland has a long history of hosting immigrants from around the world.

Affordable housing, easy access to city services, efficient transportation such as BART, and an accepting, multicultural society make the city a great place for refugees, said rescue committee spokeswoman Melissa Winkler.

But the nonprofit receives only $1,800 in federal funding to provide each refugee with housing, employment and other basic needs. That doesn't go far in the Bay Area, and refugees are expected to be financially self-sufficient within four months.

That's why the IRC chose to resettle many of them in Oakland, where housing is often inexpensive.

"It's key for us to ensure that refugees are able to keep paying their bills after the financial support ends," said Don Climent, who used to head the now-dissolved San Francisco chapter. [“Now-dissolved”; I like the sounds of that. Let a thousand chapters dissolve!]

Unfortunately, the city also has one of the country's highest crime rates, according to federal statistics and other studies.

Beth Schlachter, spokeswoman for the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration at the State Department, said government guidelines for relocating refugees don't consider crime rates. The requirements for "decent, safe and sanitary housing," she said, extend only "from the apartment itself to the building or apartment complex they're living in."

Since the start of the Iraq war, nearly 60,000 Iraqi refugees have settled in the United States, including almost 14,000 in California.

 
Keeping safe

Some Iraqi refugees, such as Harith Al-Kaiate, 47, consider safety a matter of personal responsibility. An auto mechanic from Baghdad, his family resettled in the Fruitvale area in January 2010. Al-Kaiate dismisses Oakland's crime as normal for big American cities, and he doesn't regret coming to the city. He's happy with its familiar climate, urban lifestyle, easy access to public schooling, and the fact that he was able to find work.

"There are a lot of places you shouldn't be," he said, adding that criminals have never targeted him, his wife or his three children. Even so, he hasn't forgotten the time a nighttime gunfight near his home left his car, which was parked outside, riddled with bullets. Fortunately, no one was hurt.

Ragheed Abdulameer, 32, another recent arrival, blames himself for being robbed at gunpoint earlier this year just a few blocks from his home at East 24th Street and 14th Avenue.

"I made the mistake of not looking around before getting into my car," he said. "Now I know better."


 
SFC: “Ragheed Abdulameer was robbed at gunpoint: ‘I made the mistake of not looking around before getting into my car.’” Photo: Mike Kepka/The Chronicle
 

Yet not all refugees agree. One of Abdulameer's friends has yet to bring his wife and children from Iraq, believing they're safer in Basra. The friend declined to be interviewed or identified for this article, saying he fears retaliation from federal authorities and the rescue committee.

More than a dozen Iraqi refugees who have been resettled in Oakland say they live in varying degrees of fear.

"Had I known about this place, I'd never have agreed to come," said Oday Fatah, 33, who comes from near Baghdad and lived in a building on the 3400 block of 12th Avenue until a few months ago.

 

SFC:“Iraqi refugee, Ragheed Abdulameer [sic] stands near his Fruitvale neighborhood apartment on Thursday Dec. 15, 2011 in Oakland, Calif. When Abdulameer fled Iraq by-way-of [sic] Jordan, the International Rescue Committee placed him [sic] like many other Iraqi refugees [sic] in a crime ridden [sic], low income [sic] neighborhood in Oakland. This fall he was robbed at gunpoint in front of his apartment and just a few weeks ago his father, also and [sic] Iraqi refugee, was robbed on a sidewalk just a few blocks away. ‘Its [sic] like a fight between good and bad. When you are scared, they win.[sic]’ said Abdulameer.” Photo: Mike Kepka/The Chronicle
 

Hard to move

It isn't easy for refugees to move to safer areas, particularly in the first few months after they've arrived.

That's because under the resettlement program, refugees who refuse to accept their "assigned U.S. destination" or move to another location may not receive "the same level of services and/or cash assistance," according to the State Department.

This was confirmed by Husam Abdulkhaleq, lead therapist at the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services in Dearborn, Mich. When refugees move away from where resettlement agencies "want them to be," he said, they lose federally funded benefits, often their only income in those first few months.

 

SFC: “Passing many homeless individuals along the way, Iraqi refugee, Ghazwan Alsharif [sic] heads to work on Thursday Dec. 15, 2011 in San Francisco, Calif. When Alsharif fled Iraq in 2008 [sic] the International Rescue Committee placed him like many other Iraqi refugees in a crime ridden, low income neighborhood in Oakland. Shortly after his arrival there [sic] he was robbed and severely beaten. He soon moved to the tenderloin in San Francisco where, despite the neighborhood's rampant homeless problem, he feels it is still safer that [sic] the part of Oakland the IRC had placed him in originally.” Photo: Mike Kepka/The Chronicle
 

Then there are obstacles that remain after the government assistance runs out.

Most refugees earn around minimum wage, which can make it difficult to save the money for a deposit on a new apartment. Even if a refugee can find the money, their nonexistent credit histories discourage landlords.

"So the only solution for you is to get beaten or mugged and then you can get out," quipped Al-Sharif, who says he became depressed and attempted suicide after he was mugged. His condition persuaded the International Rescue Committee to help relocate him to San Francisco.

The rescue committee agreed to move another refugee and his family after he was shot multiple times in a drive-by shooting outside a Fruitvale mini-mart earlier this year, Climent said.


 
Iraqi refugee, Ragheed Abdulameer draws the blinds on his Fruitvale neighborhood apartment on Thursday Dec. 15, 2011 in Oakland, Calif. Photo: Mike Kepka/The Chronicle
 

It's nearly impossible to be accepted as an Iraqi refugee to the United States, which means the ones who do make it almost certainly suffered horrendous trauma in their home country.

"They've survived, and they've come to the U.S. to start a new life, and if you settle them in an environment like that, you bring back all these things," Abdulkhaleq said.

E-mail Jordan Gerstler-Holton at metro@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle.

4 comments:

Remnant said...

"Millions of white Americans have endured as bad or worse at the hands of racist blacks, and yet, I don't recall ever seeing the Chronicle show them any compassion as a collective."

Amen.

Isn't it all so utterly predictable? The hierarchy of "victimhood"? The double standards? The moral blindness of the press? It still makes me sick though to think about how clueless, cowardly and harmful these reporters are.

Anonymous said...

The US's enemies don't need naval vessels, airplanes, paratroopers,and long supply lines making an invasion of the US. We have the US government through it's Immigration Departments doing that for our enemies. The US government is importing every enemy we have ever fought and are fighting to right here in the US. Islamics are just a part of that, and then we do have the Mexican Invasion completely ignored by the US government while we protect several borders around the world.
Insanity or a plan?

AnalogMan said...

"It's nearly impossible to be accepted as an Iraqi refugee to the United States, which means the ones who do make it almost certainly suffered horrendous trauma in their home country."

And yet, one of them "has yet to bring his wife and children from Iraq, believing they're safer in Basra."

Another says, "Had I known about this place, I'd never have agreed to come".

Makes perfect sense.

Miss Carnivorous said...

My friend abu R used to work for an arab grocer in Oakland. That guy had a brother who was killed by blacks. As a consequence he had a jones on to kill him one. One of the grocers would sit up where the 2 way mirror had been knocked out, holding a shot gun and hoping, just hoping somebody would try something. The other guy worked the counter, he used to be one of Arafat's special forces and he could spit razor blades at your face and when you grabbed your face in astonishment he would jump on you and beat the crap out of you. Abu R did not feel comfy working at such a place and quit. I thnk he should have first learned to spit razor blades!