Immigrant families celebrate newfound liberty
EVA RUSSO/TIMES-DISPATCH
Abdul Karim Dumbuya already pays for several children to attend school in his homeland.
Published: July 3, 2009
Updated: July 3, 2009
SPECIAL REPORT: What Does Freedom Mean to You?
Mohaned Al Soodani figured it was time to leave Iraq when people kept coming to his home to kill him.
"They think I'm spying for the United States," said Al Soodani, who was a warehouse manager for the U.S. Embassy. "Three times they came to my home to catch me and kill me. Three times they didn't catch me."
Calls from friends alerted Al Soodani, who escaped by way of the roof of his Baghdad home and fled to neighbors. When the embassy opened a program for Iraqi employees to apply to come to the United States, he was first in line.
"I like my country," he said of Iraq. "I really love it. But situations change."
Now, he loves America.
Al Soodani, his wife, Alyaa, and their 15-month-old daughter, Rawan, arrived in the United States last August after lengthy detours through Syria and Jordan. They settled in South Richmond, part of a wave of immigrants who have come to Virginia in recent years seeking freedom and opportunity.
Net immigration settlement has accounted for more than one-quarter of the total population increase in Virginia since 2000, according to the Federation for American Immigration Reform. Overall, the foreign-born population of Virginia in 2007 was more than 800,000, or about 10.5 percent of the state's 7.7 million residents, FAIR reported.
Immigrants come from all over: El Salvador, Mexico, Korea, the Philippines and India were the top five countries of origin for foreign-born Virginia residents, according to 2006 U.S. census figures, but immigrants come from dozens of countries.
They also come for different reasons. For Al Soodani, his overriding motivation was his family's safety. When did he first feel the safety he sought? Soon after arriving at Richmond International Airport.
"I was sitting in a chair, and I was not doing this," said Al Soodani, constantly turning his head left and right so he could see all around him. "In my country, I do this all the time because I don't know when they're coming. I don't know when death is coming to me."
Freedom to Al Soodani is simple: being able to wake up in the morning, go to work, do his job, come home, relax, go shopping or drive a car.
"Lead a normal life," he said.
Despite the threats and terror in his homeland, Al Soodani, 32, has been able "to maintain his sense of balance and grace as he began his new life in the United States," said Guy E. Frank, an employment specialist with Refugee and Immigration Services, which has helped Al Soodani.
"I admire him because of his tenacity and his big heart," Frank said. "He catches on quickly, he has a sense of responsibility and he has a great sense of humor, too. He hit the pavement running as soon as he got off the plane in Richmond."
Soon after arriving, Al Soodani was pushing Frank to help him find a job. He didn't want to sit around in his apartment, he said.
Little more than a month after he arrived, Al Soodani landed a job at a Richmond paper-products company.
"To find a job with good money," he said with a smile, "that's really freedom."
. . .
Eleanor Sanchez came to America from Cuba when she was 17. After being separated for more than three years from her father, who immigrated to the United States earlier, Sanchez, her mother and sister arrived by plane.
Her husband, Kenny, also came from Cuba when he was 17, but he took a slightly different route: He swam.
"We were sitting around and one of my friends said, 'Hey, you want to go to the United States?'" Kenny Sanchez recalled. "I said, 'Yeah, let's go.'"
Four young men -- Sanchez was the youngest -- jumped into Guantanamo Bay at dusk in October 1993 and swam for more than 12 hours, avoiding Cuban searchlights and fighting cramps.
Once outside Cuban waters, they were picked up by the U.S. Navy. Sanchez was brought to Virginia, where he lived with what he described as a wonderful foster family before going out on his own.
He met Eleanor after coming to Richmond, and they married and had two children.
He brought his parents from Cuba 10 years after he arrived. A year after that, Sanchez was in desperate need of a kidney transplant. His father donated one of his.
"Being here is a blessing," Sanchez said.
Eleanor Sanchez feels the same way.
"I'm so glad I'm here," she said. "It's a total change to what I left in Cuba. It's freedom. You can say what you want to say, you can do what you want to do, you can be what you want to be.
"This is life, really."
In Cuba, food was scarce, medical care spotty. Her family lived with her grandparents, the dream of owning their own place just that.
"It's amazing we're here," she said. "I would never have been able to provide the life for my kids we have now."
Kenny Jr. is 11, Mariah 9. The family lives in Henrico County. Eleanor Sanchez is a medication caseworker at CrossOver Ministry clinic, which provides medical care to the uninsured. Kenny has operated food carts for years; he and his father have plans to open a Cuban restaurant downtown.
Eleanor Sanchez arrived in the United States on July 6, 1995, missing the Fourth of July by only two days. She hasn't missed once since.
. . .
Freedom came with a steep price for Abdul Karim Dumbuya: leaving his family.
Dumbuya won a visa lottery to leave his native Sierra Leone, but on the day he picked up his paperwork at the U.S. Embassy, rebels thrust his troubled homeland deeper into chaos.
His plans to come to America, build a better life and send for his wife and son later became complicated. Dare he leave his family as a civil war raged?
His wife insisted he go.
"Right now we have no hope, no freedom," she told him. "You have to take that chance."
Said Dumbuya, "My wife is so courageous."
Dumbuya came to Richmond in 1997, got a job and began the long bureaucratic process to bring over his family. The situation in Sierra Leone degenerated and, unbeknownst to Dumbuya, his wife and son were evacuated to neighboring Guinea.
For a while, he did not know where they were or if they were alive. Eventually, he learned their whereabouts and returned to Africa to find them and bring them to the U.S. They arrived in 1999.
"My family and myself are blessed and lucky to be in the United States, where we found freedom and work hard with no hesitation," Dumbuya said.
Dumbuya works as a tailor, his wife as a nurse. Their older son, Mustapha, a recent graduate of Hermitage High School where he was a soccer standout, will attend Lynchburg College. Their younger son, Ibrahim, is 3.
Despite his success here, Dumbuya has not forgotten those left behind in Sierra Leone. He and other Sierra Leoneans living in Richmond have formed a group, Sierra Leone Self-Help Organization, to raise money to send back to those trying to put their lives back together after years of war.
Dumbuya already pays for several children to attend school in his homeland.
"Things are pretty good with us now," he said, sitting in the living room of his Henrico home. "Thanks to freedom for making all this possible."
Contact Bill Lohmann at (804) 649-6639 or
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Reader Reactions
I have found that first generation naturalized citizens are FAR more patriotic and aware of their civic responsibilities than the average native born citizen, perhaps because they know what it is like to not have freedom and prosperity to take for granted.
I say, as long as a person is committed enough to wait their turn to get residency and go through the naturalization process, they should be welcomed into our country. Some peoples’ narrow conception of what it means to be an American neglect the fact that we are all here due to immigration. My first direct ancestors came here in the late 17th century escaping Huegenot persecution in France, long before America existed as a nation. The other side came from northern Europe in the early 1900s. I do not feel that my identity as an American is diminished by this; I feel it is strengthened. My ancestors worked hard and earned their place here and eventually thrived… I feel others should be due the same opportunity.
... and to VA Gentleman:
As a civics teacher, I can tell you this: I give my students a version of the citizenship test from immigration and naturalization, once at the beginning of the year and once at the end. It counts as a grade the second time, so they’d better be able to pass it (most do).
“concerned” I won’t try and debate you but you are so wrong. Sentiment is one thing, intellect another.
A creature with an IQ of 80 is not the same animal as one with an IQ of 120. Humans express their ‘diversity’ based upon IQ not their common ancestry. Were it so we would all be living like the peope in Haiti or sticking our butts up in the air before a moonstone in Mecca!
We are equal only before the eyes of God the same as a lizard and a bird are.
Great stories. Makes me wonder if today’s children educated in government schools could pass the citizenship test.
LOL… 7 billion people in one state. Great plan.
The entire population of the world can fit in the state of Texas, with ample room for each person. Diversity will NOT be our downfall - rather, intolerance for diversity will be! Can you spell g-e-n-o-c-i-d-e?
This great nation is big enough for any and all who want to make U.S. their home, who want to be Americans. Unfortunately, we still have walls to keep others out. Who does this country belong to? To what people group?
It’s interesting that every single mass-media outlet in the country now celebrates our national holidays with pro-immigration propaganda. It’s as though immigration is to be our only respected value.
I’m sure it’s great for third-world populations to relocate to the U.S. where there are so many “free” services available. Apparently everyone in the world is an American; some of them just haven’t gotten here yet.
Meanwhile, this country has become very crowded and its economy has been trashed. At some point we have to consider what’s good for us, else we become another third-world mess too.
Do you think maybe it is time to stop immigration altogether? A ship only holds so many passengers before it sinks. What is the cost of this to the American tax payer?
KantSeay- I bet that’s exactly what the ‘Indians’ said when Christopher Columbus showed up!
Just finished reading an interesting article at the website The Oil Drum on something called the Olduvai Theory.
I suggest others read it as well for it shows, inter alia, that the US standard of living has been declining since 1973 in large because of increased immigration to this country.
Item: 14.8% of families headed by Americans receive Medicaid. 24.2% of legal immigrants do. Illegal immigrants just impose uncompensated costs on our healthcare system.
For every Elon Musk ( Afrikaner immigrant to the US who started Paypal, Tezla electric cars and Space X a space launch vehicle) we get millions of the above. People who simply freeload off of our society. We cannot continue to do this without destroying ourselves.
Sorry immigrants. This is our country not yours.
These are great stories about folks overcoming adversity to come here. The writer forgot to mention something many immigrants are VERY proud of: going through the process of becoming American citizens. Did this happen for these people?
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