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04 Nov 2008 07:51 pm
The View From Your Election: LA
A reader writes:
I'm a Muslim-American living in Los Angeles, though not very religious.
I was so giddy I woke up at 4am this morning and couldn't fall back
asleep. Lying there, I realized it was 7 o'clock on the east coast so
polling places were just opening. Thoughts of my parents back in
Virginia flooded my mind.
My parents are immigrants from Bangladesh. At 18, my father fled
ethnic cleansing camps in Pakistan while bombs fell on my mother's
village in Bangladesh--West Pakistan at the time, and rebelling. My
father paid to be smuggled across Afghanistan, and nearly died many
times before managing to enroll in university to finish his engineering
degree. Then, after marrying and having kids, he was forced to study
for an engineering degree again in 1980's America while working as a
janitor and cashier at K-Mart. The racism, condescension and poverty
he faced after immigrating to Detroit echoed the degradation in the
concentration camps of his youth. For many years my parents struggled
to gain citizenship, but were relieved they got here in time to make
sure I was natural born.
They moved to Boston where my mom sewed clothes in a sweatshop
while raising my sister and me. As the economy boomed through the 90s,
my parents bought a couple cars, a house in the suburbs, and saved up
to send us to college.
My parents live in Virginia now and my sister & her husband
live in North Carolina. My mom--who's never talked politics with me in
22 years--has been calling me daily the past week to discuss the
election. Both she and my father even volunteered for the Obama
campaign doing data entry for 16 hours on the weekends. I was shocked
when I found out--my parents have never even been to a PTA meeting, let
alone volunteer. She anxiously urged me to vote first thing in the
morning today so I would be safe at home in case anything bad happens.
Of course my parents have voted early and so has my sister.
I got to the polling place at 7:30. The line stretched onto the
sidewalk but it wasn't huge. We waited about an hour because some
elderly people needed help. A young girl helped an old
African-American woman up the stairs to the front of the line because
she couldn't stay standing too long. The atmosphere was friendly, but
almost hushed, the day's importance just beyond anyone's lips.
After punching the ballot for Barack Obama, I felt the culmination
of many generations of struggle. My throat tightened, thinking that my
parents' great journey across an ocean through half a century of
violence, poverty and humiliation was not in vain, but so they could be
here to vote for this man, at this time. A President Obama would not
necessarily change the status quo or solve the myriad problems facing
our nation and our species, but his ascension would be a sign that
there is equality, there is opportunity, there is hope. That in
America, things are fair. For my parents, this is a momentous day.
They have toiled in squalor to exert their power by supporting a man
who can guide them out of the ressentiment that keeps the moderate
Muslim community secluded and into the mainstream American dialogue.
Tears surged in my eyes as I left the polling place. This change
is not the product of a brilliant fundraiser's fancy marketing
campaign, but a very real transformation among people as they have
moved through space & time and shared experiences with each other.
If a black man with the middle named Hussein can become President of
the United States of America, anything is possible.
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