Lewiston, Maine Somalis here to stay, get used to it! Everything copacetic!

Bates College in Lewiston held an evening program on Monday to send the message that all was calm now in Lewiston, ME, that indeed the locals have gotten the message and are now accepting of the large Somali population growing in their midst.

Maybe an occasional “micro-aggression” will occur, but for the most part, critics have been silenced.

Before reading this Sun Journal story (via the Bangor Daily News), please read or re-read our post (It’s the Welfare Magnet….) on how Lewiston became a magnet for secondary migration of Somalis originally resettled elsewhere.

Here is this week’s news from Lewiston:

LEWISTON, Maine — Bates College hosted a panel discussion Monday evening with community leaders, students and local immigration activists on the past, present and future of the local Somali community.

The title was “Understanding Barriers to Integration for Immigrants in Lewiston-Auburn.”

Members of the panel included former Lewiston Mayor Larry Gilbert, City Councilor Craig Saddlemire, Fatuma Hussein of United Somali Women of Maine, and anthropology lecturer Heather Lindkvist.

The discussion centered around the early Somali settlement of Lewiston leading up to the Many and One rally in 2003 and how far Lewiston, as a community, has come since then.

For new readers, Gilbert went to Washington in July 2011 to tell the US Senate how great everything was in Lewiston and how the Somalis were causing an economic boom for the city, BUT they needed more federal money!  Go figure!

Presenter Fatuma Hussein (who came up from Atlanta and is quoted in my post on the welfare magnet, linked above), had this to say:

“We’re here and the sooner people realize that, the better,” Hussein said.

And, the anthropology lecturer, Heather Lindkvist, said this:

Lindkvist spoke of how, before Many and One, there were women and children who were afraid to go out into the community. She said it created barriers for all involved because it prevented interactions with the community.

She also addressed how some feelings about immigration may have been pushed beneath the surface.

“Feelings need to be addressed,” Lindkvist said, “or we will face micro-aggressions” and other small, explosive outbursts between community members.

Micro-aggressions?  What the heck?

I know she must be talking about those swarms of Somali youths (some as young as 8 years old) who were attacking people randomly on Lewiston streets.  I told you about it here.   This is what the Sun Journal said at the time (isn’t it a good thing I copied the story because the link is now dead):

LEWISTON — In the early evening on the first day of summer, a large group of Somali boys approached a woman on the corner of Ash and Pierce streets. According to police reports, they intimidated the woman and slapped her in the back of the head before scattering into the downtown.

Five days later, shortly after midnight, a man was accosted by a group of Somali boys outside the Big Apple on Main Street. Police reports say several members of the group punched the man and took money from him. They then fled in a car.

Later that night, a woman in her late 60s was beaten by a group of Somali boys and relieved of cash while walking in Kennedy Park.

Five nights later, another man was jumped by a group of similar description. He resisted the gang and was beaten badly. He required surgery.

Throughout the summer, similar reports have come into the Police Department. Witnesses and investigators say swarms of Somali boys, some as young as 8, others in their late teens, overwhelm solitary victims through sheer numbers.

So, I’m guessing when Ms Lindkvist says women and children feared going out on the street, she was referring to the indigenous inhabitants of Maine.   It’s good to know that they feel safe now and only need to be on the lookout for an occasional “micro-aggression.”   I wonder what macro-aggression might be?

For more exciting events in Lewiston, go here to our archives.

Update:  Things not so copacetic in Portland!

Novel to be published soon about life in New England town with growing Somali population

I’m sure you’ve guessed by now the touchy-feely novel geared to teens will be set in a town that sounds a lot like Lewiston, ME.

Here is the news from Lewiston’s Sun Journal published in a Somali publication (Hiiraan Online):

LEWISTON — Maria Padian was in the audience 10 years ago when thousands of people gathered to support Somali families and to denounce the white supremacist group that had gathered across town.

The Brunswick writer and mother of two watched in wonder as person after person took to the Bates College stage to speak about tolerance and diversity. Some were teenagers.

“There had been so much negative press, so much fear about what was going to happen, and I think all of us were looking at each other in a state of absolute disbelief over all of the positive energy that was exhibited that day,” Padian said recently.

Ten years later, a similar scene ends Padian’s new young adult novel, “Out of Nowhere.”

The book tells the story of Tom Bouchard, a Franco-American high-schooler whose life is turned upside down when his hometown becomes the settling point for a large group of Somali immigrants.

[….]

Padian, 51, worked as a journalist and press secretary before penning her first book, a young adult novel titled “Brett McCarthy: Work in Progress.” The book, published in 2008 by Knopf Books for Young Readers, won a Maine Literary Award and the Maine Lupine Honor Award. Her second book for teens, “Jersey Tomatoes are the Best,” was published by Knopf in 2011.

Both deal with the lives and friendships of teenage girls.

Her latest book is also written for teenagers but tackles a different topic. “Out of Nowhere” centers on the friendship between two teenage boys — one Franco-American and one Somali — after a wave of immigrants move into an unprepared Maine city.

Once secure in his world, Tom Bouchard suddenly finds himself struggling to understand classmates and soccer teammates who practice a different religion, speak a different language and come from a war-ravaged country he can’t even imagine. At the same time, family members, coaches and community leaders, including the city’s mayor, all have different reactions to the newcomers.

I suspect Padian is hoping for the same success that greeted the politically-correct “Outcasts United” a story about soccer and refugees in Georgia.  I wrote about it (cynically, what else!) here.

I wonder why rightwingers don’t get it—the way to ‘educate’ the low information voter is through entertainment (movies, novels, games and such), something hardly done on the political right.  Why is that?

Here is a novel idea—the setting is an unsuspecting New England burg where the African Muslims are quietly preparing for a massive military style takeover of Boston.  Their first target is Harvard University where they slaughter by beheading all the cool kids, sons and daughters of Senators, in the Harvard law library.  But, the first one to die (on the way to the library) is the feminist  who in opening scenes is leading a pro-Palestinian demonstration and making a fashion statement with one of those Yasser Arafat scarves wrapped around her soon-to-be sliced infidel neck.   LOL! My novel would be one of those dark futuristic type of stories!

Can you imagine the furor that would greet my novel!

For some balance about Lewiston, ME just type ‘Lewiston’ into our search function.  I just realized that this over three-year-old post-— Somali Migration to Maine: it’s the welfare magnet, stupid —is still almost daily among our most read posts.