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IMAGE BY LIA KANTROWITZ.

IMAGE BY LIA KANTROWITZ.

MORE MUSLIMS ARE RUNNING FOR OFFICE IN A VILE POLITICAL CLIMATE

April 25, 2017

"I'm proud of my faith, and I'm proud of who I am. I'm not leaning away from it at all," [Abdul El-Sayed] tells me over the phone. I didn't change my name. I didn't shave my beard. My wife wears a hijab. But it's not what's going to build an economy. It's not what's going to rebuild our schools or address our public health challenges."

Part of why he's entering politics is to prove that politicians don't have to fit the old white man mould.

"For me," El-Sayed says, "There is a responsibility to stand up and say, 'Look, whichever color I am and however I pray, I think I've got a skill set that my state needs right now.'"

READ MORE ABOUT ABDUL EL-SAYED, WHO IS RUNNING TO BE GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN AND WHAT IT TAKES TO RUN FOR OFFICE AS A MUSLIM AMERICAN CANDIDATES OVER AT VICE.

In article Tags article, muslim, american, politics, michigan, midwest, election
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When immigrants were detained at Angel Island, in the San Francisco Bay, they wrote poetry on the walls. PHOTOGRAPH BY AP.

When immigrants were detained at Angel Island, in the San Francisco Bay, they wrote poetry on the walls. PHOTOGRAPH BY AP.

THE LOST POETRY OF THE ANGEL ISLAND DETENTION CENTER

February 23, 2017

"What would-be immigrants couldn’t tell their interrogators they inscribed on the walls in the form of classical Chinese poetry—complete with parallel couplets, alternating rhymes, and tonal variations. In 1970, when the buildings of Angel Island were due to be torn down, a park ranger noticed the inscriptions. That discovery sparked the interest of researchers, who eventually tracked down two former detainees who had copied poems from the walls while they were housed on Angel Island, in the thirties. Their notebooks, additional archival materials, and a 2003 study of the walls—which were preserved—turned up more than two hundred poems. (There could be hundreds more buried beneath the putty and paint that the immigration station staff used to cover the 'graffiti.') The formal qualities of the poetry—which was written, for the most part, by men and women who had no more than an elementary education—tend to get lost in English translation, but its emotional force comes through. One poem reads, 'With a hundred kinds of oppressive laws, they mistreat us Chinese. / It is still not enough after being interrogated and investigated several times; / We also have to have our chests examined while naked.'"

READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE ON THE NEW YORKER.

In article Tags article, history, poetry, literature, chinese, american, immigration
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