Full
transcript of interview with Matthew Jaber Stiffler, researcher at the Arab
American National Museum in Dearborn Michigan. Story, in Portuguese, here.
Tell us about the museum…
We opened
in 2005 and this is our 9th year. We are the only museum in the country
dedicated to telling the story of the Arab Americans.
How significant is the Arab American community
in Dearborn?
Here in
Dearborn specifically the Arab community is about 40%, so there are about 40
thousand arab americans in the city. Dearborn is part of Metropolitan Detroit,
which has about 300 thousand Arab Americans living in the region.
Is that the biggest Arab American community
outside of the Middle East?
Concentration
wise, since the city of Dearborn is about 40% Arab American, there is no other
area with such a high percentage.
Do they form one community, or do the different
communities tend to keep to themselves?
It depends
on what is happening. They tend to live in specific areas, so Yemenis tend to
live in the Southern part of the city of Dearborn, Lebanese Muslims in the East
part of Dearborn, Syrian, Palestinian and Lebanese Christians tend to live in
the surrounding suburbs, Iraqi Christians live in the Northern suburbs. So
there is a diverse mix, they are in their own communities but often come
together for historical and cultural community celebrations and the museum is a
central space for that.
How did the community arise, and why did they
concentrate in Dearborn?
There were
Arab Americans in most major US cities by about 1900. The Detroit area was no
exception, but it was not until the 1920’s when Ford opened one of his big
factories in Highland Park, just North of the city of Detroit that a higher
concentration of Lebanese, Syrians and some Yemenis started moving there to
work in the factory.
In 1927
Henry Ford opened the River Rouge factory here in the city of Dearborn and so
many migrated from the Detroit area to Dearborn and that community is still
here today, 70, 80 years later, living in the same area.
Did he specifically invite Arabs to come over?
Or did a few come and then bring their families?
Partly it’s
chain migration. Ford was offering 5 dollars a day, which at the time was a lot
of money, so as far as industry work, Detroit was a good place to be.
He did
actively recruited Yemenis for their ship building prowess, so the Yemeni
community developed because of their skilled trade, but mostly its chain
migration.
At one
point on the Great Lakes the majority of people working the boats were actually
Yemeni.
Has the war in Syria polarized and divided the
community?
The Arab
American community is very closely connected to what is going on in their
homelands and there is always a diverse range of opinions, since you have
recent immigrants living in the same area as 2nd, 3rd, 4th and even 5th
generation Arab Americans. You have Christians, Muslims, people of all
political persuasions, so yes, there are differences in the ways people
perceive the conflict in the community, but it is no different than any other
uprising or civil strife that happens in the homelands.Ver também: Interview with Sawsan Jabri e Interview with Osama Siblani
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