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  • Saudi-American woman seeks political office

    Al-Jazeera, Qatar
    Sept 20 2004

    Saudi-American woman seeks political office
    By Linda Isam Haddad in Los Angeles


    An Arab-American woman has set her sights on political office in the
    United States, hoping to impart social change and create a positive
    impact on women's rights in the Arab world.

    About 50 years ago, a young girl shocked her conservative Saudi
    neighbourhood when she showed two boys how to ride a bike. They
    stared at her with a confused daze as she rode the bike down the
    street.

    Today, that little girl is all grown up and has shocked her
    neighbourhood - and the rest of her country - as she attempts to
    become the first Saudi-American woman to win political office in the
    US.

    "My look on life has always shocked people in my country," says
    Ferial Masry, who is running for the 37th district of the California
    Assembly, an assembly seat which represents Ventura County and parts
    of Los Angeles County.

    "All my life, I was interested in social change," Masry, also a
    teacher of American History and government at Cleveland High School
    in Los Angeles, tells Aljazeera.net. "I always had it in me to do
    something that may be different that can affect my community."


    Against the odds

    Masry filed her candidacy registration papers late, and ended up
    running as a write-in candidate in March 2004 for the Democratic
    primary election and was able to get enough votes making it to the
    general election where her name will appear on the ballot this
    November.

    "I barely had enough money to run a campaign," she says, citing her
    opponent Audra Strickland, conservative Republican candidate and wife
    of the incumbent Assembly person Tony Strickland, who has spent
    nearly half a million dollars with two months left in the campaign.

    Masry (C), an active Democrat,
    was very visible at the convention

    Masry says if she wins her grassroots campaign will certainly be a
    case study for the entire nation.

    The US constitution is just a tiny little document with so much
    power, she says. Masry believes with such powers citizens should feel
    responsible to become more involved in the political process, whether
    one votes or runs for office.

    Win or lose, Masry says her running for a political seat will not
    only bring awareness to important issues in her community, but it
    will also have an impact on women in Saudi Arabia and the rest of the
    Arab world.


    Growing up

    When she was only nine, her mother sent her and her sisters to be
    educated at the American Boarding School for Girls in Cairo, Egypt.

    Up to that point, the only schooling Masry had had was at the local
    Kutab in Makka, a place where children were taught how to read and
    learn the Quran.

    Masry's favourite subject in school was history. "The more we know it
    and study history, the more we can learn from it to be better people
    and [a] better society," Masry tells Aljazeera.net. "History brings
    us close to our roots."

    After earning a bachelor of arts degree in journalism at Cairo
    University and living in England and Nigeria, Masry moved with her
    husband Waleed to Southern California, a place she first fell in love
    with while vacationing.

    Waleed, born in Nigeria to a Lebanese father and Armenian mother, did
    not like the idea of moving to America, "but he also didn't mind it",
    Masry says. "I decided on it because I knew it was the place to
    pursue the future."

    She counts on her family for
    support and encouragement

    In 1979, they did just that, opening a small photograph-processing
    business, and becoming US citizens three years later.

    During that time, Masry pursued and earned a master's degree in
    school administration at California Lutheran University.

    Today, Waleed works as a civilian electrical engineer in the US army.


    On the issues

    "She's a smart woman because she brings the best of both worlds,"
    says Zella Brown, 80, of Thousand Oaks, a city in the district Masry
    is running in.

    "Her background is tremendous and I enjoy learning more and more
    about her."

    Brown has been a Democrat since she first registered to vote, and
    believes Masry brings forward not only Democratic principals to the
    table, but as well ideas and values most politicians do not have that
    may help her campaign.

    One of Masry's biggest concerns, especially as a teacher in the Los
    Angeles Public Unified School District, is how public education is
    being handled.

    She ran on a shoestring budget in
    the primary election

    One of California's biggest crises is that its educational system is
    lagging behind other states' public school systems. It is a struggle
    trying to balance a budget deficit without hurting the public school
    system.

    "The beauty of [America's] system is that you can be educated until
    the day you die," Masry says. "But the unfortunate thing is the
    politicians have a hold of our education, and the first thing I would
    try to do is to take education out of the hands of the politicians."

    Masry stands firm on the issue of not hurting public schools' budgets
    when trying to balance the states' budget.

    "As a high school teacher, I stand for a good public education, which
    should be a normal thing and not a privilege," Masry says.


    Defeating stereotypes

    America's relationship with Saudi Arabia is considered a
    controversial one among some Americans, especially since it was
    revealed that 15 of the 19 hijackers in the September 11 attacks were
    Saudi-born.

    With America's ever-growing efforts to combat "terrorism",
    stereotypes of Arabs have also been growing in the minds of some
    Americans.

    "There is a stereotype [about Arabs], but it all depends on how you
    receive it," Masry says. "Stereotypes about Arabs and anyone else
    disgust me, yes, but I do not and will not allow it to hurt me. We
    [Arabs] are a people with a proud heritage.

    The Saudi-born Masry wants Arab
    women to believe in themselves

    "Stereotypes may even come from your own community," says Omar Masry,
    the candidate's oldest of three children.

    Unfortunately, Omar says, some Arabs automatically assume that
    because his mother is Saudi Arabian, she is rich, and so they will
    not donate money to her campaign.

    Omar is very hopeful his mother will win, despite the fact the
    district she is running in is predominantly Republican. "[My mother]
    is able to bridge differences," Omar says. "She is not your average
    white bread Ryan Seacrest look-a-like wannabe politician who cannot
    relate to average Americans."


    Creating social change

    Masry has certainly attracted much attention since her determination
    to run for the assembly started this year.

    "People like me because I am funny and not threatening, but at the
    same time I'm very serious when it comes to seeing things change for
    [the] good," she says.

    "Unfortunately, women in [the Arab] culture feel oppressed and blame
    the culture," she says. "Part of the problem is not our culture, but
    the woman herself."

    She hopes women in the Arab world will stand up and believe in
    themselves and go against any force that oppresses them.

    "Unless you take yourself seriously, know you can have an effect on
    your community and respect yourself and believe in yourself first, no
    one else will believe in you," she says.
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