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Searching for the Arab American story

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  • Searching for the Arab American story

    Arab American News, MI
    March 31 2007

    Searching for the Arab American story
    By: Ali Moossavi / The Arab American News
    2007-03-31

    Most Americans view people of Middle Eastern descent as either
    terrorists or buffoons, thanks to the media and entertainment
    industry. Yet there's a real history of Arabs in America that goes
    back to the nation's founding. And most people are also ignorant of
    the contributions Arab Americans have made - and continue to make -
    to the fabric of the United States.

    It's these facts that the Chief Executive Officer of Verasoni
    Worldwide Communications and Syrian-American Abe Kasbo seeks to
    correct through his documentary film in progress, "The Arab American
    Experience."

    Kasbo's goal is to ensure that the contributions of Arab Americans
    are viewed as part of the American experience. "When I looked around,
    I saw Irish, the Italians, you know, the Mexicans, they all have one
    of these," he said. "They all have a film about how they contributed
    to the American fabric."

    "And certainly, Arab Americans have been contributing to the American
    fabric for about 200 years, so somebody had to tell their story and
    we're doing it."

    The "we" Kasbo talks about includes Arab Americans and non Arab
    Americans alike, including Kenn Bell, a filmmaker who won the 2003
    Sacramento Film Festival short film entry, with "Tedtrip." Aside from
    Bell, however, making this movie has been an arduous - and non-profit
    - "labor of love," Kasbo says.

    Among the unknown contributions Arab Americans have made to the
    United States that Kasbo's team has found, is military service. The
    first Arab American to die in combat was Syrian immigrant Private
    Nathan Badeen, who died on May 23, 1776, a month and a half before
    the United States came into existence.

    Since then, according to the website, www.arabamericanexperience.com,
    Arab Americans have fought in every war the U.S. has engaged in. The
    most significant contribution occurred during World War I, when 10
    percent of the Syrian-American population - 15,000 men - went off to
    fight.

    "In WWII, for example, there were at least 10,000 people of Arab
    American origin who signed up to fight on the side of the United
    States," Kasbo said.

    The inspiration for making this movie stems from his own experiences
    as a Syrian immigrant. Born in the city of Aleppo and of Armenian
    descent, Kasbo came to the Paterson, New Jersey area at the age of 10
    in 1980, right in time for the Iranian hostage crisis and the first
    wave of American prejudice against Middle Eastern immigrants.

    "People were confusing Syria with Iran, so at the time it wasn't a
    most hospitable place," he said.

    Like all immigrants, he found a niche to win acceptance, and that
    niche was sports. Since then, he became an adjunct professor at Seton
    Hall University, teaching marketing and public relations at the
    Graduate Center for Public Service. In 2005, he founded Verasoni and
    is listed in NJBiz's "Forty Under 40" 2006 Class, which recognizes
    exceptional business leaders under the age of 40.

    Other contributions from exceptional Arab Americans include those in
    the entertainment industry, which includes Danny Thomas, Kathy Najimi
    and Tony Shalhoub; and Congressman Charles Boustany and Ralph Nader
    in politics. It's this hidden history that Kasbo is trying to
    illuminate.

    "I want this film to show the important contributions Arab Americans
    have made to the fabric of the United States," he said, highlighting
    it as his first goal.

    His second goal for the movie is to build bridges between the
    perceptions Americans have of their Arab counterparts and the reality
    of being an Arab American. His third goal is to show that there's no
    difference between Arab American experience and the experience of
    other immigrants.

    Since the project is non-profit, with no major financial backing, the
    project relies on the contributions of ordinary people. So far, Kasbo
    says, the Arab American Institute and American-Arab
    Anti-Discrimination Committee have helped out, but with 40 hours of
    footage shot, Kasbo says his team will need 200 more in order to
    finish. And, he and his team will be coming out to Detroit and Ohio,
    so more support will be critical to the project's success.

    "Right now, we have a website, you go to
    www.arabamericanexperience.com and you can actually see some of the
    interviews," he said. "People can share their stories with us right
    on the blog and certainly they can donate to the effort and any
    donation is very much appreciated."

    For more information on "The Arab American Experience," go to
    www.arabamericanexperience.com
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