Making Refuge
The term refugees has become the latest buzzword, causing people to either spew hate speech or extend a warm welcome – thereby creating a firm dividing line. There is so much discussion about refugees that people sometimes forget the very individuals who are forced to stand astride that dividing li...
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Formato: | article |
Lenguaje: | EN |
Publicado: |
International Institute of Islamic Thought
2017
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Acceso en línea: | https://doaj.org/article/35f07f2874f7417d87f4e9d7c1a9dbe0 |
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Sumario: | The term refugees has become the latest buzzword, causing people to either
spew hate speech or extend a warm welcome – thereby creating a firm
dividing line. There is so much discussion about refugees that people
sometimes forget the very individuals who are forced to stand astride that
dividing line. Who are they? What are their stories? What does it mean to
be a refugee? How are they coping once they reach the United States?
How are their lives impacted by this divisive debate? What are the struggles
they continue to have? How are they influencing the larger communities
where they live? Catherine Besteman addresses all of these questions
(and more) in her timely study, Making Refuge: Somali Bantu Refugees
and Lewiston, Maine.
Besteman introduces the book by speaking of her yearlong stay in Banta,
Somalia, as part of her anthropological fieldwork during the late 1980s, just
before civil war broke out. She then immediately shifts the lens to Lewiston,
Maine, in the year 2010, home to a large Somali refugee community. Juxtaposing
these two worlds to frame her inquiry, she delves into Banta’s pre-war
history: a simple yet harmonious village life built around communitarianism
and happiness within poverty, of agriculture and the “rule” of village elders, of
pre-defined gender roles and extended families ...
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