A New Jersey few know: Paterson's
thriving Arab community
AAF commentary by Aref Assaf
Milton
Vorst’s article shown below leaves out arguably important
reasons as to the yet to be realized political empowerment of
Paterson's Arab Americans. Of note is that fact that most of the
people interviewed for the feature article, while they may have
businesses in Paterson, actually live somewhere else. While
Paterson may be described as the economic and ethnic capital of
Arab Americans in NJ, it is naive to describe its Arab
population as a thriving community or as the
political power base for the
State’s 250,000 citizens of Arab
decent. Paterson's economic engine and its infant political machine are run
by remote control.
It is a fact that most Paterson Arabs see their city as a
transitional station until their economic wellbeing is improved
before moving to the suburbs. Several reasons account for this
observation. First, the city's economic
condition and
State-run educational institutions pale compared with other parts of
the state. This has led many parents to move out to other areas
with reputable schools and safer environments. Second, Paterson
has lacked the needed housing and leisure resources to retain
those who attained greater economic independence and began to
seek more amenities and better lifestyles. Third, most Arab
residents, being first generation immigrants, tend to shun
political activism-a direct result from the political turmoil
they faced (and escaped from) in their homelands.
Lastly, unlike their predecessors, post 1967 Arab immigrants tended
to be better educated and upon completion of their studies
either ventured into their own private practices or relocate to
other states more able to reward them for their high level education.
It must be also noted that the post 911 security measures
against( interviews, profiling, and the patriot Act
ramifications) Arabs and Muslims have fostered a fatalistically
apolitical and insecure mentality amongst the community.
Consider for example the refusal of the Immigration authorities
to grant permanent residency to
Imam
Qatanani, the leading religious figure in the area. Add to
this the political lynching of Arab-American
Sami Merhi at the hands of Democratic Party leaders fearful
of Jewish reprisals.
All the doctors, the lawyers and professional mentioned most
likely live in mansions in Franklin Lakes or Alpine. As such,
their economic wealth has not translated into tangible political
currency impacting Paterson’s political landscape. In very city
department, we remain terribly underrepresented and this is not
necessarily the fault of discriminatory polices by outsiders.
While Paterson may rightfully claim to have the most Arab-owned business in
NJ,
we must also recognize that most of the economic activity their is generated from wealthier Arabs
who live in the surrounding areas.
Paterson's Arab residents remain
either with questionable immigration status or recent immigrants
beset with language barriers and or lacking high level skills- rendering them
prey to menial and low paying jobs. As such, their numerical
clout has not had the expected political currency in local
elections. Add to this the City’s indifference to the Arab
section which, we have argued, if fully developed could become
an economic Mecca not only for shoppers from Passaic County but
also from the entire metro area.
There is a certain discernable
and troubling disconnect between Paterson Arabs’ emerging
economic clout and their nascent political prowess. Until
Paterson is perceived as not only a place to visit for fresh
falafel and flavorful hookah, but also a
place in which to live and raise families, the potential for
realizing the American dream will elude the community which thus
far remains politically marginalized and truly transitional.
Aref Assaf
A New Jersey few know: Paterson's
thriving Arab community
Star Ledger
Sunday, April 08, 2007
BY MILTON VIORST
I enter Paterson over the Broadway hill past Eastside Park, where
as a kid I biked on clear days, turning to gaze at the Manhattan
skyline a dozen miles away. The park is where I caught fireflies in
a jar on hot summer nights and belly-flopped on a sled on cold
winter afternoons, where I sold sodas to picnickers on Sundays and
once tried out, unsuccessfully, for the high school baseball team.
Just below the park, in the direction of downtown, is Derrom
Avenue, whose elegant mansions long advertised the wealth of
Paterson's commercial aristocracy. Incongruously, amidst these
mansions now stands the Islamic Center, Paterson's principal mosque,
symbol of the city's latest transformation.
Paterson, it is widely said, is home to America's second-largest
Arab community. Dearborn, Mich., is first. Paterson is also the hub
of several hundred thousand Arabs living in northern New Jersey.
Yet, growing up, how come I knew no Arabs?
The city, rather handsome and well-kept in those days, was shaped
by solidly middle-class Irish, Italian and Jewish communities. Since
Alexander Hamilton persuaded George Washington to harness the power
of the roaring falls of the Passaic River, its wealth derived from
industry, but in the 20th century it also served as a commercial hub
for several hundred thousand residents of the North Jersey region.
My grandfather came from Poland in 1900 to work in Paterson's
silk mills, the industrial core; my father, after a turn in the
mills, found retailing more compatible. The earliest Arab immigrants
were Christian Syrians drawn from the textile workshops of Aleppo;
Muslims, a second wave that began in the 1920s, preferred to set up
small shops.
By the 1940s, Arabs were an identifiable community, but I never
saw them. Paterson's ethnic groups were largely strangers to one
another, gathered on their own turf around their churches, later
their synagogues, then their mosques. Though we lived in
neighborhoods that were tightly juxtaposed, only rarely did we cross
the lines.
Over history, Paterson had its share of strife, but it was class
rather than ethnic. The silk strike of 1913 was a milestone in
American industrial history, still discussed over the dinner table
when I was a kid; the unions, though multi-ethnic, showed
solidarity, but the mill owners, by moving operations out of the
city in search of compliant workers, triumphed.
By the Depression, with silk facing a vanishing world market,
Paterson's industrial base was already depleted. During World War
II, my father worked on an assembly line in a vacated silk mill,
building aircraft engines. But when the war ended the factory shut
down, and Paterson never succeeded in rebuilding a viable economic
foundation.
In the 1960s, my parents, both of them working in suburban
clothing shops, quit their "transitional" neighborhood in Paterson
to move to a garden apartment on the fringe of a shopping center,
built on a golf course beyond the city line. They remained there
until they died 20 years ago.
They and the other departing whites in their era left behind real
estate bargains that attracted poor blacks and Latinos -- and later
Arabs. Few Irish, Italians or Jews remained. The newcomers had less
capital and more children. The city's per capita income, along with
its tax base, slipped to roughly a third that of the nearby suburbs.
Homeownership fell to half the national ratio. To aggravate matters,
local government was infected with the New Jersey disease of corruption.
When I returned for the first time after 20 years, I found an
impoverished city, suffering from persistent neglect, barely
resembling the Paterson I knew. Behind the wheel of my rental car, I
drove in a daze that mixed nostalgia with disbelief. I rediscovered
the houses in which I lived and the schools I attended. But the
Alexander Hamil ton Hotel, a local landmark, had been abandoned,
leaving the city without lodging; I checked into a nondescript motel
on a passing superhighway.
By then, the two Paterson newspapers I once knew, one of which
gave me my first reporter's job, had long closed. Familiar streets
now carried the names of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks.
The branch library from which I had borrowed books was shuttered.
The half-dozen movie theaters where I spent Saturday afternoons
(once, Paterson even had a symphony orchestra) were all gone; now it
didn't have even one.
The kosher delicatessen, where on special occasions my mother
treated me to a hot pastrami on rye with a pickle, was now "The
Queen Supermarket." The classic Masonic Temple, where my Uncle Bill
attended mysterious meetings, announced in lights, "Love of Jesus
Family Outreach Center." The bank where I opened my first ac count
was a Laundromat, and the ice cream parlor where I had my first
date, after eighth-grade graduation, was the Los Hidalgos Food
Emporium.
At the downtown's edge, the Barnert Memorial Temple, a grand
Moorish-style synagogue which President William McKinley visited in
1900 soon after its dedication, had vanished. In its place stood a
White Castle hamburger stand.
That brings me back to the Islamic Center. When "white flight"
struck the Barnert Temple, many of its members were too old to move,
so its leaders elected to relo cate temporarily uptown. By then,
Derrom Avenue's elite families were disposing of their fine
mansions. The temple bought one of them and made it into a religious
school, and on the adjacent ex panse of lawn, erected a synagogue, a
red brick schoolhouse-style building surrounded by a blacktopped
parking lot.
A generation later the temple quit the city entirely, and in 1990
the building became the Islamic Center of Passaic County, acquired
with the donations of the swelling Muslim community in Paterson and
the nearby towns. Save for concerns over traffic, the neighbors
raised no objections to having an Islamic institution in their
midst.
BUILDING A COMMUNITY
In the early 20th century, Paterson's Arab community had been
composed chiefly of Lebanese and Syrian Christians, who joined exist
ing churches or established their own. The Muslims who joined them a
couple of decades later had different religious requirements, which
were met mostly in small private mosques. But a plaque dated 1927 in
the King Solomon Memorial Park, a Jewish cemetery, shows they had
already founded a burial association and acquired land for
interments.
By the 1930s, the Arab community, Christian and Muslim, had
colonized a strip along South Main Street. A few Arab immigrants had
settled there at the turn of the century, and successive waves of
newcomers, knowing they would be welcomed, fell in behind them.
Christians remained preponderant for decades, but after World War
II, a turbulent era in the Middle East, migration tipped to Muslims.
In time, Palestinians, in flight from wars and military occupation,
be came South Paterson's most numerous residents.
Awni Abu-Hadba is considered the mukhtar, the village chief, of
South Paterson. He arrived from Palestine in 1971, having graduated
from Birzeit University, on the heels of a brother who preceded him
by two years. Driven by the American dream, he said, he attended
night school to get degrees in accounting and insurance. He also set
up a store to sell jewelry and electronic gadgets.
In a cluttered back office, Abu- Hadba advises his neighbors on
their tax and insurance needs. A small, rotund man, Awni -- as
everyone calls him -- carries himself with the dignity that befits a
mukh tar. He seems to know every Arab on the street. On the wall is
his photo with Yassir Arafat. In 1976, he returned to Palestine for
a wife; he came back with Maysoon, with whom he had five children,
all of whom have attended public schools. At home, the family uses
both Arabic and English. His oldest son, he said, runs a halal --
the equivalent of kosher -- butcher shop, his two daughters are mar
ried to lawyers, and his two youngest sons are preparing to be
doctors.
Leaving his back room, Awni and I crossed South Main for lunch.
He chose one of the half- dozen Middle Eastern restau rants that are
strung out to the right and the left. Among them are two
Syrian-owned supermar kets, both fragrant with the spices of
traditional souks, offering Arab cheeses, chickpeas and taboula,
grape leaves and maluk hia, a leafy vegetable soup. Nearby butcher
shops proclaim their halal credentials. The Nab lus Pastry, near the
end of the strip, is considered a treasure for its succulent Middle
Eastern des serts.
Inside the restaurant, dark- eyed young men crowded around a
television set, watching Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, the head of
Lebanon's Hezbollah, discuss the recently ended war with Israel.
Most of South Paterson's homes have access to Arab television;
roof-top satellite dishes bring in the news from Al-Jazeera and
other Middle Eastern channels. Joined by some friends, Awni and I
ate collegially, Arab fashion, dig ging into dishes of humus,
diverse salads, falafel, kebabs, pita and rice. We drank Cokes,
since no alcohol was sold. In a scene that would be typical on the
West Bank, families came and went, many speaking Arabic, the women
in hijabs.
STRENGTHENING POLITICAL POWER
Paterson, Awni told me, has about 25,000 Arabs -- a more agreed-upon
figure is 15,000, about a tenth of the city's population. But his
exaggeration had a political purpose. He was introduced to local
politics in 1984, he told me, by Frank Graves, a legendary Irish
mayor, who made clear to him that the rewards the community could
expect were in ratio to the number of votes it produced. So he
started to organize, Awni said, and by the next Election Day had
registered 600 voters and had decided to run himself for the city
council. Though he came in third, he earned Graves' esteem. It is
surely no coincidence that stores on South Main Street carry posters
that say: "Organize, Register, Vote. Help Strengthen Arab-American
political power."
The Arab community, Awni said, is hardworking and prosperous;
unemployment is low, homeownership is the norm. Shopkeep ers like
himself are its backbone, but it is rich in lawyers and teachers,
plumbers and carpenters, small manufacturers and engineers. The area
also has more than 300 Arab doctors, including a quarter or more of
the physicians at both St. Joseph's and the Barnert, respectively
the Catholic and the Jewish hospitals. One day I ran into one of
them at the Islamic Center, who recalled that he had cared for my
mother at the Barnert during her last days, 20 years ago.
Awni's efforts to promote Arab power through politics came close
to collapse last spring. It was when Arabs, already frustrated by
the federal decision to cancel a seaport-management contract with an
Arab firm from Dubai, learned that the Passaic County Democratic
party had summarily dumped one of their community as its nominee for
the county governing body, the board of freeholders. Sami Mehri,
born in Lebanon 57 years ago, runs a medical supply business with
two Jewish partners. He is on the board of two area hospitals and
serves as an adviser to the Passaic county sheriff. On 9/11, he lost
a godson who worked on the World Trade Center's top floor.
Esteemed though Mehri was, a statement he had made in 2002,
quickly provoked a challenge from within the Jewish community. At a
dinner he had organized for Congressman Bill Pascrell, he called the
9/11 hijackers "cold-blooded murderers ... crazy fanatics. They're
as far from God and Islam as hell itself."
He also condemned violence, "whether it's committed by a person,
a group or a state"-- a formu lation in which the final word is seen
as Arab code for criticism of Israel. Later, asked whether his
condemnation of violence covered Palestinian suicide bombers, he re
plied, "I can't see the comparison" with the 9/11 killers. His words
reflected the view of most Arabs, who endorse the right to make war
against Israel's military occupation of their land. This position is
rejected by most Jews.
Democratic Sen. Robert Me nendez, in search of Jewish votes in a
close race, immediately called for Mehri's removal from the
Democratic ticket, and with the support of Gov. Jon Corzine, he
succeeded.
When Mehri countered by an nouncing his candidacy as an
independent, Corzine nervously invited him to meet and Menendez
issued an apology. The outcome was that Mehri dropped out of the
race and, on Election Day, Arab votes swelled Menendez's
unexpectedly wide margin of victory. But the ten sions of the Mehri
episode did not quickly disappear.
SUSPICION AND TRUST
Arabs have no doubt that the Mehri episode was part of the wave of
suspicion directed at their community after the 9/11 attack. The
same suspicion animated the FBI, and especially its Newark
headquarters, whose domain included Paterson and the New York area's
three airports.
Even before 9/11, John Paige, a senior FBI agent, said he had
become a familiar figure at Paterson's Islamic Center. He and his
supervi sor, Leslie G. Wiser Jr., the special agent in charge,
talked with me in the FBI's Newark headquarters. After 9/11, they
told me, the FBI was ordered to change its priority from law
enforcement to terrorism prevention, and to this end, Newark shifted
its strategy to establishing a bond of mutual trust with Paterson's
Muslims.
"We understood we could not count on the community's cooperation
by using strong-arm methods," Paige said. "On the day after the
attack, we went to them for help. We began interviewing people up
and down South Main Street, which was the start of 40,000 interviews
that we conducted. That was in addition to following up every tip we
received. The Islamic Center and some other mosques provided us with
Arabic-speaking interpret ers."
"We also had a long-term goal," Wiser said. "We wanted to
neutralize the negative stigma associated in their minds with the
FBI and with law enforcement generally. It is not that the Muslim
community we encountered was at all hostile. This isn't France,
where Muslim kids rioted last summer (2005). The Muslims of Paterson
are integrated into the economy and the political system. Their
mosques are run by successful people, responsible elders. I think
their good experiences in America have discouraged radicalization.
We don't delude our selves about the dangers of terrorism, but we
considered this a start to better relations."
"We know that Paterson is not a hotbed of extremism," Paige said.
He made a point of telling me, however, that 15 of the 19 hijackers
had stopped in Paterson in the days be fore 9/11. They apparently
chose it, he said, "to hide in plain view." They had drop boxes in
Arab shops and acquired IDs and drivers' licenses there, he said.
Their presence, he said, was confirmed in library and ATM records,
Internet findings and photos taken by secu rity cameras in gas
stations and re tail stores.
Curiously, the 9/11 commission, which conducted an exhaustive
investigation, says in its report that only "Hanjour, Hazmi (two of
the hijackers) and several other operatives moved to Paterson and
rented a one-room apartment," in which the landlord "later ... found
six men living." Echoing Paige, the commission says in Paterson the
men "established new bank ac counts, acquired a mailbox, rented cars
and started visiting a gym," though neither its staff nor the FBI
could account for the discrepancy in the numbers.
The Arabs in Paterson, however, were skeptical, contending that
in a community as tightly knit as theirs, it would have been
impossible for substantial numbers of outsiders, whether six or 15,
to pass unnoticed. If they saw questionable characters, they say,
they'd have reported their presence promptly.
A SOCIAL ANCHOR
Hani Khoury, a lawyer specializ ing in citizenship cases, was among
several young Arabs who expressed resentment at the suspicion in
which the community is held. Speaking in his small law office, he
acknowledged that Paterson's Arabs are socially more conservative
than they were in the 1970s, when he arrived as a child. Recent
refugees, he said, have had a disproportionate influence: Fewer
local Arabs drink, and more women cover their hair. They have used
religion to promote solidarity, he said. Some of them are radical,
ar guing that Muslims should not participate in an infidel society,
not even to vote. He called this wave "scary" in its refusal to
sacrifice its identity, even for the safety it en joys here. But he
had no reason to believe, he said, that their zealotry breeds
terrorism.
Khoury described Paterson as more "proletarian" than other
havens, and so more attractive to most Arabs. Arabs like being able
to walk down South Main Street and speak Arabic, he said. They see
faces that look familiar and feel they are at home.
Khoury said he and his well-educated contemporaries, he said,
want to live their lives in America both ways. They move to the
suburbs but keep returning to Paterson, satisfying a longing for a
social anchor. He described the city as a quick and easy fix, a way
to get to the Middle East without taking a plane. "We love to watch
the old men in the coffee houses playing backgammon. We love the
restau rants and the music," he said, "Even my wife, who is not
Arab, loves them."
Yet, he cautioned that his generation also shares the community's
objections to America's Middle East policies. It keeps its re
sentment in check, he said, only be cause, as immigrants in an immi
grant culture, he and his friends feel truly American. What troubles
them since 9/11, however, is how much the equilibrium has shifted.
"What we observe is that the internal dynamics of the country has
changed," Khoury said. "We have to be more tight-lipped now, more
fearful. We already felt abandoned by George Bush and the
Republicans. Then, when the big shots in the New Jersey party threw
Sami Mehri under the bus, we felt aban doned by the Democrats, too.
It confirmed our growing apprehension that 'they're doing it to us
be cause we're Muslim.' The lesson we learned from these changes is
that we'll have to stay on our toes, tak ing nothing for granted."
A RELIGIOUS HUB
While I was doing research for this article, I visited often at the
Islamic Center, the fountainhead of Paterson's Muslim community. Fri
days were crowded with men in diverse dress, all shoeless, praying
in the sanctuary. Afternoons after school hours, kids played noisily
in the vestibule or shot baskets outside on a basketball court. I
could read Muslim community papers stacked next to brochures
offering pilgrimages to Mecca, or watch white-haired men swinging
worry beads as they browsed through religious volumes in the
bookstore. Someone usually offered me a coffee or a tea.
Mostly, however, the visits gave me an opportunity to have a word
with Mohammed El Filali, a bearded 41-year-old ex-biologist from
Morocco who, as "outreach director," is the engine of the mosque's
relations with the outside world. His goal, he says, is to affirm
Islam's membership in American society.
A subject Filali doesn't like to discuss --the Islamic Center
has, for now, chosen to play it down -- is the menacing cloud that
lurks overhead in a federal deportation order pending against the
imam, Sheikh Mohammad Qatanani. A Palestinian with top credentials
as an Islamic scholar, Qatanani ar rived with his family from his
home in Jordan a decade ago and, having been refused permanent
residency, has remained at his post with successive temporary visas.
In 2003, however, Homeland Security noti fied him that he would be
denied another visa and, declining to say why, would have to leave
the coun try.
By now, he had won wide favor in Paterson not only for presiding
over improved ties between Mus lims, Christians and Jews but for
leading a daring campaign against domestic violence and abuse of
women within the local Muslim community. At the same time, he has
spoken with a consistent voice against Israel's occupation of
Palestinian territories, which persuades Arabs the deportation is
the product of Middle East politics.
It was between services at the Islamic Center's busiest day of
the year, marking the end of Ramadan, that I was able to meet Sheikh
Qa tanani in his office off the vestibule. Though too busy for a
formal interview, he greeted me warmly and insisted I take a cookie
from a jar on his desk. I asked whether he was troubled by the
deportation case the government had brought against him. He was more
willing than Filali to comment, and answered in English: "We can
talk more when we have time, but the government made a mistake in
doing this. I'm here to stay, and I think I will stay."
After the service, the Ramadan worshipers congregated
gregariously in the center's parking lot. On the perimeter was a
falafel stand and a set of soft drink machines, jammed with buyers.
Pinned to the brick wall were placards advertising trips to the
Middle East, pharmaceuticals and banks "financing the Shari'a way."
One of them announced that the Barnert, the Jewish hospital, was
"sensitive to the needs of the Islamic community. Halal meat
served."
The men in the crowd embraced one another ceremoniously, the
women showed off their children and their Islamic finery, most of
the teenage girls whipped off the hijabs they had worn at prayer,
put on lipstick and let their hair fall. "The dress code for our
women is optional," Filali had told me with bemusement.
The scene brought back to me the throngs, of which I was a part,
that once gathered on Jewish high holidays in front of Temple Ema
nuel, just down the street.
THE CITY'S FUTURE
I couldn't leave the city of my birth without paying respects to its
mayor, Joe Torres, the first Latino to win the job. I found him in
the landmark city hall, a beaux-arts palace with stained-glass
windows and sculptured eagles, crowned by a 164-foot clock tower.
Paterson's elders, who inaugurated the building in 1896, clearly
meant it to convey an optimistic vision for the new century. Yet it
would no doubt disappoint the long-departed elders, since, like the
city itself, city hall reflects in its shabbiness Paterson's long
industrial decline.
Paterson now has a master plan, Torres said, and its growth rate
is among the fastest in New Jersey. Construction is up, crime is
down, six new banks have established offices, private money is
coming in. He boasted of the designation of the Passaic Falls and
the old mill district -- unkempt as they looked when I saw them --
as a state park, in the running to become a national park. He
predicted they would in time make Paterson a major tourist
attraction.
Torres acknowledges that Paterson politics is a contest between
ethnic groups. "In our city, politics has always been racially
driven," he said, though he notes with satisfac tion that in his
re-election, he had strong support in every ward and did
particularly well among Arab- Americans, the newest emerging
political force.
But Arabs, because they are prosperous, are also upwardly mo bile
and, in the Paterson tradition, continually leave for the suburbs.
"Arabs support me now because I meet their needs," he said. "I talk
to their imams and visit their mosques. ... The city's only night
life is along South Main Street, and they know I appreciate what
they contribute. But they're not yet ready to take over. Demography
is against them. Still, politics here is a revolving door, and I
know their time will come."
Milton Viorst has covered the Middle East as a journalist and
scholar since the 1960s. He was The New Yorker's Middle East
correspondent, and has written six books on the Middle East. He
lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife, the poet Judith Viorst.