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- DATE: JAN.25, 1991 12:52 REPORT:
- TO: SPL
- FOR: GIBBS
- CC:
- BUREAU: SOUTH
- BY: JOSEPH J. KANE
- IN: ATLANTA
- SLUG: ARAB AMERICANS
-
- The most powerful politician in affluent DeKalb County,
- a suburab of Atlanta is Manuel Maloof, the patriarch of a
- sprawling Lebanese-American family. He is a New Deal-
- Kennedy Democrat surrounded by Republicans.
-
- In Houston Texas, A. Robert Abboud is Chairman of First
- American Bancorp. whose troubles these days transcend his
- Lebanese Heritage and focus on his shaky bank.
-
- Danny Thomas.
-
- Ralph Nader.
-
- Jamie Farr.
-
- Naajeeb Halaby.
-
- Queen Noor.
-
- John Sununu.
-
- Who are all of these people? Where have they been all of
- these years? It takes an invasion into the ancient Holy
- Land of Canaan for most -- read it , white -- americans
- to focus on a large group of immigrants and their
- offspring who have come to this country and quietly
- integrated themselves into the eco- social fabric with
- Jeffersonian ease and grace.
-
- They are super Aamericans who work for Norfolk &
- Southern Railways, attend public schools, manage Holiday
- Inns and belong to the National Guard or Army Reserve.
-
- In Missouri City, Texas, for example, Genghis Khan
- Elkadiri, an Iraqi who owns the Arabian National Shipping
- Corp. says, " Once when I was in New York City during the
- Vietnam War when people were burning the American Flag on
- the street, I punched a man in the nose. The policeman
- let me go when he found out what I did."
-
- In an Atlanta food store two weeks ago, Charles Nama
- whose father was born in Syria was asked by a white
- neighbor what he thought about the FBI questioning Arab-
- Americans. Says he: " I didn't even know they were
- questioning Arabs!"
-
- But his high school daughter was wondering, says Nama
- whose wife is a pale, blonde southern belle, "Whre this
- will leave them. They don't understand."
-
- While total participants in the democratic process,
- Arab- Americans find time out to gather and to party. The
- Cedar Club is the Atlanta branch of the Southern
- federation of Syrian-Lebanese Americans. They have
- parties routinely at local hotels but the big event each
- year is the "Hafla", a three-day convention party usually
- over the Labor Day weekend.
-
- There is dancing, discoing fashoion shows and backgammon
- and carrying on. But the officials running the
- festivities always have security guards on hand because
- fights have been known to
- break out when some of the party-goers demand the band
- plays Palestinian music. Says one member, "Lebanese do
- not like Palestinians and if they apply for membership in
- the Cedar Club, they will be black-balled."
-
- The surnames of Maloof (Malouf) and Azar are the
- Smith-Jones equivalent.
-
- Perhaps the most uncomfortable place for an
- Arab-American to live these days is in the south which
- owns the franchise on discrimination.
-
- There may be as many as 2500 Arabs in the New Orleans
- area but the Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee is rather
- small since the individual Arabs prefer to weave
- themselves privately into the American fabric. "We don't
- feel isolated," says Ahmad Suleiman, a chemistry
- professor at the University of New Orleans. At least one
- Palestinian shopkeepr in the Crescent City says he has
- received threatening phone calls.
-
- A Bangladesh professor in Houston was assaulted by a
- neighbor a few hours after the air raids began.
-
- Also in Houston, an hispanic employee of the Bagdad
- (note sp.) carpet cleaning company, operating in Houston
- since 1948, was beaten by four men yelling racial
- epithets at him. Bullet hoels in the window of the
- delivery van have prompted the company to remove its logo
- last weekend.
-
- Manzoor Hussain, a Pakistani did not mind initially when
- reporters in Pearl, Mississippi came to seek quotes from
- his nine-year old son named Saddam. He moved his family
- to Hoke County, N.C. in the fall and when the air raids
- began last week, the harassment of the fourth-grader
- began all over again.
-
- Part of the Arab problem is that many see both sides of
- the equation like a 21-year old, anonymous Palestinian
- college student in Charlotte, N.C. who noted the Scud
- attacks on Israel and concluded: "Saddam stood up for his
- primise."
-
- Jamal Madouh, a Kuwaiti living in Indian Land, S.C. is
- surprised,and he notes, "I thought Hussein was just
- bluffing. I thought he would definitely back out at the
- last minute."
-
- Adel Alsharid, a Palestimnian, is ambivalent. The
- student at University of North Carolina at Charlotte
- says, "I wasn't happy" about the U.S.invasion. I knew it
- was going to happen but I tried to convince myself that a
- peaceful solution would happen before they invaded."
-
-