Faithful: Syrian-born Omar Kurdi, a Muslim, prays between classes at the University of California, Irvine. Political activism has been at the center of his college experience. (Tony Avelar/The Christian Science Monitor)
The new voter: A young Arab-American feels duty-bound to vote
Syrian-born Omar Kurdi of Irvine, Calif., became a US citizen at age 15. A student activist, he gives much weight to the candidates’ foreign-policy stances, especially in Iraq and the Middle East.
By Daniel B. Wood | Staff writer/ October 30, 2008 edition
Reporter Dan Wood discusses his profile of first-time voter Omar Kurdi.
Reporter Dan Wood
Tony Avelar/The Christian Science Monitor
Omar Kurdi became a US citizen at age 15. Now a college student and campus activist, the young Californian feels voting is vital for Arab-Americans in this post-9/11 period.
Irvine, Calif.
Omar Kurdi grew up doing all the typical things of American boyhood: riding bicycles with neighborhood buddies, rollerblading, and getting swept up in game fads like pogs.
His pathway to the ballot box, though, has been more unconventional. The Syrian-born college student had to become a United States citizen first.
He cleared that hurdle early. At age 15, Omar went with his dad to the federal building in Los Angeles to have his picture taken. Because of his age, he didn’t have to be interviewed or be sworn in with his parents.
With citizenship comes the vote, and Omar says that he, being a “post-9/11 Arab-American,” feels an intense obligation to exercise that right. He cites “a pressure on the whole Arab community to be more involved, [which] means carrying on your responsibility through voting or whatever other means.”
Omar, who often visited relatives in Syria during his youth, appreciates firsthand the difference between elections in a democracy and a dictatorship. At 21, he’s already a seasoned activist for worker rights, Palestinian causes, and social justice matters – fully exercising the free-speech rights that he knows would not be tolerated in some countries.
That doesn’t mean he thinks his adopted country is perfect. The US doesn’t qualify, technically speaking, as a true democracy, Omar asserts in an e-mail follow-up to an interview, in part because “it disenfranchises people who lack access to political power – namely working class/poor people.”
He is not one who intends to be disenfranchised. Though this serious young Californian is not yet sure who will get his vote for president, it probably won’t be either of the major-party candidates, primarily because of their stances on foreign policy and the Iraq war. That means his pick won’t become the next US president, but that does not sap Omar’s enthusiasm for casting his first vote ever.
“I’m excited about voting … because I think it’s a very crucial period in history, and the results of the decisions we make will be felt all over the world for years to come,” he says. “When the US prides itself on being the leader of the free world, it’s an added burden to live up to the standards that it sets for itself.”
* * *
Damascus-born, Omar left Syria with his mother and sister at age 1 to join his father, then an endocrinologist, in New York.
“It was to be only for a brief time; then we stayed 20 years,” says Omar, sinking his teeth into fresh-cut fries at an In & Out Burger just off the eucalyptus-lined campus of the University of California, Irvine (UCI), where he’s a student. Omar has come to love much about America after leading a hopscotch life from New York to New Jersey to Tennessee to Mississippi and now to California, where his family’s two-story suburban house in Irvine “pretty much fits the ‘Brady Bunch’ mold.”
Except for summers in Syria, where he hung out with extended family and worked at his uncle’s package delivery business, Omar says he had a conventional American upbringing, with 10 years playing in the American Youth Soccer Organization to prove it.
His first memory of a US presidential election was Dole versus Clinton versus Perot in 1996, when he was a freckle-faced fourth-grader living in Mississippi.
“It stood out to me that here was this Texas billionaire who funded his own campaign and got a significant following,” says Omar. He contrasted that with what he’d seen of elections in Syria, where “a president is elected for life and then his son takes over.”
“When I was younger, I watched as President [Hafez] Assad won with something like 98 percent of the vote and I said, ‘Wow, this guy must be really popular,’ and my dad said the numbers were just ‘fake.’ ” As the years went by, Omar says, he grew to understand the “farce” that elections are in his birth country. “It’s laughable that they called the whole thing an election,” he adds.
By the time he was 15, his parents decided that US citizenship was in order. He, his older sister, and their parents had in the mid-1990s received the green cards so coveted by immigrants, expedited by the fact that his father had agreed, through a government program, to move to Mississippi to work in an area underserved by endocrinologists. By then, a younger brother and two younger sisters were already US citizens, having been born in America.
* * *
Now a history/international relations major in his last quarter, Omar is active in three student organizations at UCI: the Muslim Students’ Association, the Worker-Student Alliance, and Students for Peace and Justice. He also spends 18 hours a week as an unpaid intern for the Council on American-Islamic Relations. He sees that work as crucial to countering bias and hate crimes against Arab-Americans, which since 9/11 have “increased dramatically.”
Omar has devoted so much time to the student groups – organizing speaking events and protests – that he’s had little time for intramural football and no time for parties. He took part, for instance, in a campaign for better wages and health benefits for university food, landscaping, and dining workers. He didn’t consider it fair that those workers earned minimum wage while the president of UCI Medical Center was drawing a $600,000 salary. The campaign won wage hikes for the UCI workers, and the same issue is now percolating across other UC campuses.
A nondrinker and nonsmoker, Omar finds no allure in the college party scene. In fact, he’s never been to one. “If you are an activist, you have to be a social square,” he says. “There’s just not enough time for both.”
The issue is broader than how one spends one’s own free time, he says. Dedicated political activists can’t be too careful, he argues, asserting that US government informants have in the past infiltrated antiwar and civil rights groups and used women and drugs to distract and entrap activists.
Omar’s longtime best friend, Egyptian-American Yasser Ahmed, confirmed in a phone interview that he’s never known Omar to attend a party in high school or college. “It’s hard to believe, but it’s true. He’s way too serious,” says Yasser, who graduated from UCI two years ago and runs his own Internet publishing firm.
Omar aspires to be a lawyer – maybe international law – and is already studying to take the LSATs. Yasser, though, sees “serious, beloved professor” in Omar’s future. “He has always been more mature than the rest of those his age,” says Yasser. “Intellectually, he really stands out.”
All the work for the student activist groups has also cut into time for academics, Omar allows. “But it was worth it,” he says, “because these groups helped shape my college experience and made me more active in politics.”
Omar, Yasser, and others have started an informal club of like-minded activists who intend to keep exchanging information about issues they care about.
“I just think a citizen has to do more than just vote,” says Omar. “One has to continue to struggle to create the fundamental change that’s needed. Most Americans just cast their ballot and then forget about it.”
* * *
Although Omar always knew he wanted to vote, he didn’t get around to doing anything about it until a paid signature-gatherer for a ballot initiative approached him at a supermarket in May 2007. He was supposed to get confirmation by mail that he’d been registered, but it never came. So one day Omar stopped into the local Department of Motor Vehicles office, where voter-motor needs are met, and filled out the necessary forms.
Like most students his age, Omar is following the presidential election in part through Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart of “The Daily Show” and Stephen Colbert of “The Colbert Report.” “These guys are comedians but you still get a lot of legitimate news,” says Omar. “I don’t know what they’re going to do without [George W.] Bush for laughs.”
But he’s also a self-described news junkie, getting his daily news from CNN, MSNBC, Fox News, Al Jazeera, and the Internet. He blames the media in large part for what he sees as Americans’ “ignorance” and lack of sophistication about world issues.
“American politics seems obsessed by minor details that don’t have anything to do with anything but dominate the discussion,” he says. “Like whether or not [Barack] Obama wears a [flag] lapel pin.”
Omar doesn’t see a meaningful difference between Senator Obama and Sen. John McCain, especially on foreign policy. “There’s certainly not substantial disagreement over foreign policy or the war in Iraq. The differences between McCain and Obama seem more tactical,” he says. “The fact that it was an illegal war leading to a bloody occupation seems to get swept under the carpet.”
On Election Day, he is going with a third-party candidate – either Ralph Nader or Green Party nominee Cynthia McKinney.
The historic 2008 political season has seen a surge of new voters. This occasional series profiles Americans who registered or cast a ballot for the first time this year.
Comments
2. Annelies | 10.31.08
I hope he (and everyone else!) remembers to vote in EVERY election — it’s not just about who’s in the White House, it’s also about who’s in the governor’s mansion, city hall, & on the school board.
3. dottydo | 10.31.08
This obama speech writer said it best about the top runner.
“The party I believed in wouldn’t look down on working people under any circumstance. And Joe the Plumber is right. This is the absolutely worst time to raise taxes on anyone: the rich, the middle class, the poor, small businesses and corporations.
Our economy is in the tank for many complicated reasons, especially because people don’t have enough money. So let them keep it. Let businesses keep it so they can create jobs and stay here and weather this storm. And yet, the Democratic ideology remains the same. Our approach to problems—big government solutions paid for by taxing the rich and big and smaller companies—is just as tired and out of date as trickle down economics. How about a novel approach that simply finds a sane way to stop the bleeding?”
Wendy Button
4. Lizet | 10.31.08
Its remarkable to see young people strive for what they feel strongly about. Determined young bright minds, such as Omar, deserve merit. They can teach us all a thing or two about standing and attaining worthy causes we personally aim for in life for the sake of humanity.
5. SABRY AZIZ, CPA | 10.31.08
I admire the hard work of Omar & the kurdi’s family and their contribution to America. I disagree with him in casting his vote to a candidate that may not win. Better give your vote to the one who is the least of the two evils.
I second the good and courageous endorsement of colonel Powell and his remarks about religion and race in the election.
6. FormerTexan | 11.01.08
As an Obama supporter, I have to agree that Omar is right about the foreign policy thing. But there IS a huge difference to muslim between Obama and Mccain: Gitmo. Obama will close it and REALLY stop torture. mccain, and this the SECOND reason he’s morally corrupt, won’t do that, he will continue the torture, hiding it under all sorts of euphemism. And him being the 2 year victim of torture during his 5 year capture. He spilled the beans for 3 years.
The first reason why Mccain is morally corrupt is that he’s now WORKING TOGETHER WITH the same people who racially abused his adopted 8 year old daughter Bridget in the SC 2000 primary with the nastiest pushpoll (”Did you know John mccain fathered a black daughter out of wedlock?”). Hiring them, that is a level of sickness seldom displayed in US politics.
7. Peter Manda | 11.01.08
In the 2000 election, I was mesmerized by the allure of the third party candidate. I learned then only the holder of office has a direct policy say and directly fashions the policy agenda. In hindsight, my 2000 vote was a waste: I should have made a direct choice between establishments. This year, I think the choice is clearer as to which candidate provides hope for us multi-cultural Americans.
8. olusegun aiyeleso | 11.01.08
It is all well and good for this young man to aspire to vote….but does it make sense when you are voting for a candidate that has absolutely no chance to win in order to make a statment (I’m still wondering what that statement could possibly be). And regarding your foreign policy comparison, one candidate actually voted against the war because he felt it would be “an illegal war and lead to a bloody occupation”….I wonder how that point could be lost on Omar!
9. Tom Brucia | 11.01.08
It will be interesting to see if Arab-Americans can follow the same road that Jewish Americans did 50-100 years before: from being despised, feared, loathed, and a discriminated against group of non-Protestant foreigners to an integral part of the American scene. It would be nice to see a day when instead of politicians referring to ‘our Judeo-Christian heritage’, they would refer to our ‘monotheistic heritage’. (It’s too much to hope they’d simply leave religion and ethnicity out and simply refer to all kinds of Americans simply as ‘Americans’….)
11. Kevin | 11.02.08
When I see Omar, I’m reminded of how little I contribute to the political process. We have become pacified by the narratives put out by the both the democratic and republican parties. Many just can’t think outside of these rhetorically constructed boxes. Talking head politics !!!
Informed, passionate youth willing to take political risks are badly needed. My hope is that their passion will be also be moderated by reason and compassion.
Real dialogue is badly needed in this country.
12. AML | 11.02.08
Thanks for the enlightening story on this young man.I hope he’s not alone. Americans seem to me a bit sheep-like, too lazy (or occupied trying to make ends meet) to become active citizens.
Under the Bush regime, our rights HAVE eroded (ie. Habeus Corpus) and the economy is in a shambles. We all need to take to the streets if need be, before we become a sham democracy. Unless of course you’re content with the status quo.
13. AML | 11.02.08
Thanks for the enlightening story on this young man.I hope he’s not alone. Americans seem to me a bit sheep-like, too lazy (or occupied trying to make ends meet) to become active citizens.
Under the Bush regime, our rights HAVE eroded (ie. Habeus Corpus) and the economy is in a shambles. We all need to take to the streets if need be, before we become a sham democracy. Unless of course you’re content with the status quo.
PS. Obama was not in the Senate when the vote for the war came up, but he DID speak out against it as a state senator.
14. Lizet | 11.03.08
Most people today would agree to disagree that we are content with the national status quo at this time. A social movement and more participation by active citizens would definitely stirr up more political activity in Washington.
Blessings to all.
15. Darlene Tillman | 11.04.08
Thank you for this very interesting article about a fascinating young man. As a 75 year old woman who still hopes to learn a lot more about everything, I’d be happy to know titles of books Omar might recommend to increase our knowledge of the Middle East.
As s political activist from 1960, I would urge Omar to reconsider his voting stance. No one is perfect, no party is perfect but perhaps one’s vote might be better used if it were to be more effective. (When I first voted, however, I said,”I would vote for my candidate even if I were the only one to do so.”)
16. RRS | 11.04.08
I agree with John Griffith. An inspiring story indeed. This is what America is all about.
17. Caveate Utilitor | 11.04.08
I am an Arab American, I voted today , I made sure I woke up at 5:00 a.m, called very one I knew to remind them on the east cost how important it is to vote. I went all Democrat on the ballot , even for people I did not know - wherver my ballot said- prefer Democrat, I slapped a big black ink next to it.Never been so happy inking a scan-tron.
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1. John Griffiths | 10.30.08
In one generation, this Arab American immigrant family produced a doctor serving in under-served areas, a lawyer (to be) student leader, and an internet publisher. America’s strength is in her diversity. It is shame how this political campaign demonized Arab and Muslim Americans. Kudos to Colin Powell for saying something honest about it.