Unknown Dangers Worse Than Bombs
Abu Haidar, 47, worked for several years as a driver for NPR in Baghdad. His trip to America was a shock.
"When I arrived in America, there was no work, especially for someone without a degree and with no English. Such people can't make it in America," he says.
Haidar's experience may be a worst-case example. The visa program settled him in Houston, and everything went wrong from the start. Food, lodging and transportation were too expensive, and his salary as a cleaner at a hotel was too low. And he had arrived in the U.S. with some pretty harsh stereotypes about some of the people living there.
"There are Mexicans living there. So I felt scared to go out. I worry about my son and daughter. My son almost went crazy he's used to coming home at midnight, but there, he had to be in by 8 [p.m.], just like a prison," he says.
Somehow, the unknown dangers in America scared Haidar more than the car bombs still exploding back in Iraq. Besides the racial stereotypes, his son also protested that sweeping floors was a shameful job for a man of his age. After just two months, Haidar called it quits.
"I'm not going to tell anyone else what to do," he says, but for himself, he is happy to be back in Iraq.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122278853
A) What does it say for Houston that people prefer Iraq to it?
B) It's silly that the reporter says that the Iraqi CAME to US with racial stereotypes. How hard is it to believe that the guy had bad experiences with Mexicans in the US and formed impressions as a result? Mexico is a a war-zone right now. If people, including people from Iraq, form negative impressions about Mexicans is it his fault or Mexicans' fault?