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FEATURE-From mud huts to Walmart, Bantus make new life in US
Reuters ^ | 11/25/03 | Alan Elsner

Posted on 12/01/2003 8:25:02 PM PST by Pikamax

25 Nov 2003 12:59:53 GMT FEATURE-From mud huts to Walmart, Bantus make new life in US

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By Alan Elsner, National Correspondent

UTICA, New York, Nov 25 (Reuters) - In June, Mohammad Hassan was living in a mud hut in a squalid refugee camp in Kenya, slept on the ground, gathered firewood in the bush for cooking and barely subsisted on U.N. food handouts.

Now, Hassan, 20, and his family live in a four-room apartment in upstate New York. They buy clothes at Wal-Mart and food in a supermarket. Hassan works in a local cosmetics factory. His brothers and sisters attend American schools.

"We have come from hell to heaven. Everyone has their own bed with a real mattress. We don't have backache any more from sleeping on the ground, 10 of us squashed into a space the size of one small bedroom. We don't wake up any more with dust covering our faces. Nobody is hungry any more," Hassan said.

Hassan is a Somali Bantu. His ancestors were torn from their homes in central Africa as slaves in the 18th and 19th centuries and condemned to feudal bondage in Somalia. Even after emancipation, they continued to be treated as second-class citizens and never assimilated into Somali society.

When Somalia collapsed into bloody civil war in the early 1990s, they along with hundreds of thousands of others fled to refugee camps in a desolate border area of Kenya. Even in the camps, the Bantus faced discrimination, hostility and occasional attacks from their fellow refugees.

Now, the United States has agreed to accept all 13,000 Somali Bantus remaining in these camps, and they will be brought over during the next few years.

The operation began in May and so far around 800 Bantus have arrived to be resettled in communities across the nation. Forty-five have received a warm welcome in Utica, a gritty working-class town well used to settling refugees.

"A quarter of the population of Utica is foreign born and 10 to 12 percent are refugees. Since 1970, we have resettled over 10,000 refugees here, including around 4,500 from Bosnia," said Ioana Balint, health services director for the Mohawk Valley Resource Center for Refugees.

The Bosnians are revitalizing a formerly run-down part of the city, buying and refurbishing houses and opening dozens of shops, ethnic restaurants and businesses.

RoAnn Destito, a New York assemblywoman from Utica, said: "Refugees and immigrants have been a godsend. They have filled a void in our community, which lost 40 percent of its population when factories and a big military base closed."

Still, the culture gap for the Somalis is huge. Most have never used a modern bathroom or operated an electric appliance. Fatumah Osman, 19, listed some of the new foods they have tasted in the United States -- apples, orange juice, pizza.

Then there is the cultural divide. Some Bantus practice polygamy and many subject their women to female genital mutilation -- both of which are illegal in the United States.

RAPID ADJUSTMENT

But Balint said their adjustment had been rapid. "When they arrived, the women were wearing beautiful, colorful tribal clothing. They soon got rid of them and bought American clothes," she said.

"We took the women shopping to Wal-Mart. We thought they would be hesitant but they immediately started piling their shopping carts with stuff," she said.

The next lesson was to tell them they only had $100 to spend for each family. If they wanted more, they would have to get jobs and earn money.

Fatumah Osman has already absorbed that lesson. "America gives us the chance to study, to work and to make money. It's the best thing," she said.

During a reporter's visit with the family, the teen-age girls became fascinated with Balint's nylon stockings, which they had never seen before. They plied her with questions: What are they for, what are they made of, how do they stay on, which colors do they come in?

Not everyone is doing equally well. One family, with seven children under the age of 12 and an eighth on the way, is finding life particularly challenging. The mother attends English classes at the refugee center in the morning while her husbands stays home with the three youngest children. Then he goes to work in a factory from 3 p.m. to 2 a.m.

Hassan was working at the same factory for $5.50 an hour but has already found a better job offering more money. In his spare time, he studies for his high school equivalency degree.

"When I get that, I will go to college. I want to be a doctor," he said.

In mid-afternoon, his nine brothers and sisters arrived home from school, laughing and grinning. School was easy, they all said. "Except algebra," added 16-year-old Atica. The 8-year-old twins immediately opened their backpacks and started doing their homework.

"The best thing is we are safe here," said Hassan. "The worst thing? There is no worst thing."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aliens; bantus; immigrantlist
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To: JustPiper
BUMP! ..On target as usual!
21 posted on 12/02/2003 11:59:46 PM PST by Pro-Bush (Homeland Security + Tom Ridge = Open Borders --> Demand Change!)
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To: JustPiper; Pro-Bush
"Now, the United States has agreed to accept all 13,000 Somali Bantus remaining in these camps, and they will be brought over during the next few years."

"I don't care if he's Bantus or ToyRus, Mexican or African or Iraqi, we are bringing yet 13,000 more illegals and a definite threat to security!!!

That has got to be the single most ignorant post I have ever read on FR, and the other foold kudos you for it!

HOW IN THE WORLD CAN THEY BE ILLEGALS IF THE US GOVERNMENT IS NOT ONLY GRANTING THEM ENTRY, BUT BRINGING THEM HERE!?!?!?!

22 posted on 12/03/2003 1:46:14 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (The Gift Is To See The Trout.)
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To: JustPiper
If our government brings them over as refugees, they are NOT illegal immigrants.
They are entirely legal, and deserve to be welcomed as legal immigrants, as much as any other legal immigrant should expect to be welcomed.
Assimulation into our society will be hard enough, without people lumping them into a criminal status, which they do not deserve.
They are LEGAL IMMIGRANTS.

I am surprised that you, of all people, cant tell the difference.

23 posted on 12/03/2003 7:03:29 PM PST by sarasmom (Message to the DOD : Very good , troops.Carry on. IN MY NAME)
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To: Luis Gonzalez; sarasmom
That has been brought to my attention...maybe too much reading between the lines...I am now using my magnifying glass and caution
24 posted on 12/03/2003 8:25:10 PM PST by JustPiper (Teach the Children to fight Liberalism ! They will be voting in 2008 !!!)
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