Somalis in Lewiston still facing difficulties of 'strange ma

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Somalis in Lewiston still facing difficulties of 'strange ma

Post by Daanyeer »

..........."If somebody says 'I'm happy in Lewiston,' they're lying," he said. "We're having a hard time in this city. We're trying so hard to be part of this community, trying so hard to find a job, but nobody gives us a chance."



Somalis in Lewiston still facing difficulties of 'strange marriage'


Source: Portland Press Herald
May 12, 2007 Author: JERRY HARKAVY (AP)




An incident in which a middle school student tossed a piece of ham onto a table surrounded by Somalian Muslim youngsters has again exposed a cultural divide in this former mill town.

The widely reported episode left some residents wondering whether the student committed a hate crime. Others complained that the whole thing was overblown.

It's all part of what one Somali activist calls "a strange marriage" between refugees fleeing a war-torn homeland in Africa and a nearly all-white city of 36,000 that is trying to bounce back from decades of economic stagnation.

More than 3,000 refugees have settled in Lewiston in the past six years, giving the city the highest concentration of Somalis anywhere in the country.

Along Lisbon Street, the main downtown thoroughfare, the latest newcomers have created a mosque, the Red Sea restaurant and a couple of halal grocery stores. Women in colorful head scarves or ankle-length hijabs walk together on downtown streets, not far from the twin towers of the Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul.

Stores feature Somali food, clothing and phone cards that keep buyers in touch with family members in Somalia or refugee camps in Kenya.

SOME FEEL UNWANTED

The city's tensions were underscored by the school prank that made headlines, and an incident last summer when a man rolled a pig's head into the Somali mosque. Pork is considered unclean by Muslims.

Haaruan Sheekhey, a 27-year-old Somali who moved to Lewiston from Denver two years ago, said he's ready to try his luck elsewhere. His restaurant failed after it was hit by vandals who scratched a swastika on a window, and employers are reluctant to hire Somalis, he said.

"If somebody says 'I'm happy in Lewiston,' they're lying," he said. "We're having a hard time in this city. We're trying so hard to be part of this community, trying so hard to find a job, but nobody gives us a chance."

Others say that Somalis are assimilating well and that a handful of racial incidents don't reflect the way the newcomers have been accepted.

"Yes, there is some friction every once in a while, but that often gets blown out of proportion," said Pierrot Rugaba, program director for refugee and immigration services of Catholic Charities Maine. "Things have improved, but like everything else it takes time."

CHILDREN ARE THE FUTURE

At the 94-unit Hillview public housing project, black and white kids play basketball together on the outdoor courts. In the activity rooms, Somali children, including girls in head scarves, take computer lessons or music or art classes, while students from nearby Bates College provide help with schoolwork.

The project's population is now 70 percent Somali, but the manager said the change in racial makeup doesn't seem to have triggered friction, and residents pretty much get along.

"There are 500 people living here, and you're always going to have neighbor problems. But they're no different and no more frequent than before," Carla Harris said.

Many Somalis have found housing at Hillview and at a larger project in another part of town. Many more are clustered downtown, in aging three- and four-story tenements once occupied by French-Canadian immigrants who could walk to their jobs at the textile mills in the city's industrial heyday.

By most accounts, language problems and lack of job opportunities have proven to be the biggest hurdle to Lewiston's Somalis as they try to move up the economic ladder, leading many to shift their hopes and dreams to the next generation.

"Their children are the only assets they have. They left everything else in Somalia," said Said Mohamud, manager of the Mogadishu Store. Mohamud, 46, who taught chemistry at a university in the Somalian capital, has a daughter studying at Smith College who plans to go on to medical school and another child studying accounting at Barry University in Florida. His six other children plan to go to college, he said.

SEEKING SAFETY

Somalis arrived in Lewiston in February 2001, and it marked a turning point in the ethnic makeup of a city that the Census showed was 97 percent white. Six years later, Lewiston's Somalis number an estimated 3,000 to 3,500, close to 10 percent of the population, with an additional 30 or so arriving each month. Because of the Somalis' large families, the percentage in the schools is even greater.

Lewiston's emergence as the city with the nation's largest percentage of Somalis happened by chance. Many had been placed in the Atlanta area, where it was assumed that a warm climate and a large black population would ease their adjustment to life in America.

But dismay at high crime levels and concern about a culture of drug use, alcohol and gang activity prompted the community to look elsewhere, Mohamud said. The word went out that Maine was a safe place.

Immigrants had been resettled in Portland, but a shortage of affordable apartments forced newcomers into shelters. Lewiston, where population losses created a vacancy rate of about 8 percent, had the housing that Portland lacked.

"Lewiston is a small town, with no experiences of having immigrants from Africa, so it was a strange marriage," said Omar Jamal, executive director of the Somali Justice Advocacy Center in St. Paul, Minn. Minneapolis has the highest number of Somalis, 20,000, he said, while Lewiston has the highest concentration.
A city of Lewiston's size has advantages for the newcomers, he said. "Unlike big cities, where they could be easily ignored, in a small town everybody's visible," Jamal said. "Everybody knows everybody."

But life in Maine has not come without problems, starting with a letter by Mayor Larry Raymond in 2002 asking the Somalis, then numbering about 1,000, to advise their countrymen not to come to Lewiston because city resources were "maxed out."

Tensions ran high again last summer when the pig's head was tossed into the mosque during evening prayers at the Lewiston-Auburn Islamic Center.

Though the perpetrator said he did it as a joke, he was charged with desecrating a place of worship. He committed suicide after a recent standoff with police.

On April 11 came the ham incident at Lewiston Middle School. The state attorney general looked into whether the incident was a hate crime. The student was suspended but no charges were filed.
Jimmy Simones, owner of a popular restaurant near City Hall and a grandson of Greek immigrants, said such incidents should not overshadow the way the city has welcomed its latest arrivals from abroad.

"All newcomers run into these bumps in the road. This is nothing different," he said.
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