Chaldean News THE DETROIT JEW 1 SH NEWS building community ■11■ INITIATIVE - o Similar struggles, decades apart ecades prior to the wave of Chaldean refugees seeking asylum in southeast Michigan, Jews fleeing similar religious persecution set the example of successful resettlement. Even at the turn of the cen- tury, with the American auto industry in full swing and a booming economy, life wasn't easy for early immigrants. Many Jews left behind professional lives, as did Chaldeans, for the chance to start new Doctors, educators and lawyers fled their homeland and picked up a broom at a local shop; quite often the only way, with the language barrier, they could earn a living. As wilily followed, they learned customs and settled close to those already established. "Immigrants have come here, in many ways, to reunite with their families," said Norm Keane, executive director of Jewish Family Service. Early Chaldean immigrants fell victim to the language barrier as well. "Men who used to run several stores now wash dishes in a restaurant. Women who were pharmacists now clean houses," says University of De- troit Law School professor David Koelsch. Immigration policies that are inconsis- tent and/or inadequate have also adversely affected both populations through the years. "The turning away of the MS St. Louis displayed a staggering failure of the U.S. government to appreciate the reality of the situation facing European Jews," said Koel- sch, referring to a German ocean liner full of Jewish refugees sent back to Germany shortly before WWII. He continues, "While parallels with the Holocaust are impossible, the inconsistency in [current] refugee pro- cessing shows a failure on the part of the U.S. government to accurately understand the nature of the Chaldean population." Chaldean Federation Executive Direc- tor Joseph Kassab explains the Jewish support and kinship etched in history, "The reason for that...is the hardship they endured through Europe and the Middle East. Now we're having similar problems in our own country." With a growing support system of sec- ond- and third-generation Chaldeans and well-established Jews in Metro Detroit, the fight for refugee freedom continues with each community well-positioned to lend a hand, as their ancestors did for them. D 5 0 0 Jews from the former Soviet Union await family reunification at JFK International Airport in 1982. Since the late 1970s, more than 1,000 families were resettled in the Detroit Jewish community. executive director of the Jewish agency established in 1928, aillibutes the collaboration to previous generations. "Jews had the same difficulties when they first immigrated — language barriers and find- ing a job, initially. Had our parents, ancestors not been in the same place, we may not have made it here. We understand their [Chaldeans] path." Personal and professional lessons In the legal area, a student clinic at the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law provides free guid- ance and filings in immigration cases. "Changing policies created confusion and uncertainty among refugees and their family members," Professor Da- vid Koelsch told the Chaldean News in April. "More than anything else, refugees and their families need consistency. They need to know where they will rebuild their lives." He and another faculty member oversee a dozen second- and third-year students, including young Chaldeans who combine personal passion with aca- demic skills. "Having family that has dealt with this in the past, it hits home," senior Sandy Savaya explained to the Chaldean News before graduating in May "You understand more of what they went through." Kassab, the Chaldean Federation of America di- rector, appreciates the win-win law school relation- ship. "Organizations like these open the door for Chal- dean refugees," he said. "Continuing to pound on the tables and knock on doors alongside advocates has helped lift restrictions on Iraqi refugee immigration." For families who fled Iraq, supportive outreach by future lawyers, Jewish neighbors and the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society represents "the home of the free" as much as campaign lawn signs, the anthem before Tigers games and the banner atop flagpoles. Alan Stamm and Justin Fisette are writers for Tanner Friedman, a marketing communications firm in Farmington Hills. PRESENTiNG SPONSOR Bank of America . GOLD SPONSORS WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY meijer DIVIC DETROIT ED CA CENTER SILVER SPONSORS Lawrence Tech COLLEGE OF BUSINTESS DEARBORN KEN Bloomfield Hills Schools August 5 • 2010 35