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As Human as They (We) Are - Honoring World Refugee Day with Young Adult Texts by Bryan Ripley Crandall, Ger Duany, Abdi Nor Iftin

6/18/2021

 
Intro

As Human as They (We) Are - Honoring World Refugee Day with Young Adult Texts
Bryan Ripley Crandall, Ger Duany, Abdi Nor Iftin

“We are all trying to make it the best way we know how, so when we look at each other as individuals and nations, we should do so with compassion” ~ Ger Duany
 
“I am here to have freedom, peace, and opportunities like every other American, and most importantly to be accepted as an American, not as an immigrant or refugee” - Abdi Nor Iftin.
On June 20, 2021, a year and several months can be marked since Covid-19 initiated its reminder of human vulnerability around the world, including those of us who reside in United States. Well over a half-million individuals have lost their lives in this country alone, with more than three and a half million lives across all nations. Illness and disease have little respect for borderlines, divisions, and territories. No matter the country, an individual's wealth or status, the number of languages one speaks, or the amount of access one has to technology and education, human beings remain human beings everywhere. We are susceptible to both human-made and natural disasters. In the end, as the truism goes, we only have one another. Human togetherness matters most.
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The three of us came together as individuals with a love for stories and an understanding for the power of spoken and written languages. We feel a responsibility to assure ALL narratives are told, including those from individuals who arrive to Western traditions from dynamic refugee-backgrounds (Roxas, 2010; Crandall, 2014, 2018; Perry, 2008). We collaborated here because it was the right time - a result of Bryan’s academic interests and work within the National Writing Project, Ger’s international advocacy for refugee stories through pen, film, and theater, and Abdi’s mission to bring voice to radio, to print, and to audiences world-wide. Our histories are rhizomatic - the same ones that brought (and still bring) conflict across the United States are also entangled within a complex, colonial root system tied to wars, violence, and civil disturbances around the world. With this recognized, and with an intent to achieve culturally and historically responsive pedagogy (Muhammad, 2020), we recognize that literacies are always identity-making, skill-producing, intellect-building, and critical (that is, both of high importance at this moment and in need of agitation for a better world).
Why World Refugee Day. In 2001, on its 50th anniversary, the UN General Assembly declared June 20th World Refugee Day, a time to honor the strength and courage of refugees everywhere and to encourage public awareness and support for the rights, the stories, and the plight of people who have fled their homes, neighbors, and lands due to violent conflict and/or natural disasters. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, refugees are individuals,:

who been forced to flee his or her country because of persecution, war or violence. A refugee has a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group. Most likely, they cannot return home or are afraid to do so. War and ethnic, tribal and religious violence are leading causes of refugees fleeing their countries. (www.unrefugees.org)

Over the past 3 years, 79.5 million individuals have been forcibly displaced from home nations - 26 million of these individuals are refugees. Half are under the age of 18, and the numbers increase every day.

​ There are numerous misconceptions about refugees, as they are often portrayed as powerless, hopeless burdens driven by handouts and charity. This depiction is false. Throughout history, displaced individuals have demonstrated strength, hard work, and devotion to democratic ideals, especially in the United States. Lazarus’s “The New Colossus” (1883), in fact, was bronzed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty in 1903 to name ‘Huddled masses yearning to breathe free’ as part of our democratic heritage. Immigrant populations, including refugees who relocate to Western societies, have always given back more than they take. A willingness for hard work is innate, as former political refugees such as Isaac Newton, Freddy Mercury, Albert Einstein, Gloria Estefan, Sigmund Freud, Madeleine Albright, Thado Mbeki, Iman Mohamad Abdulmajid, and Malala Yousafzi have demonstrated, globally, throughout history.
Why Refugee Stories for Young Adults. More often refugee narratives are cultivated within Western societies as objects for pity, aid, and suspicion (Macdonald, 2018). At the same time, they become locations for admiration, awe, and inspiration. In schools, Universities, and libraries, such stories shock, shake, disturb, and educate readers about global inequities and injustices. For these reasons, we encourage critical reading of refugee stories with young people so they understand such stories are more than a statistic or a slide presentation at a high-level meeting, an academic conference, or a 1-minute commercial.  Yes, we see the irony of speakers and presenters talking about refugee stories as they enjoy expensive lunches and reside in comfortable hotels, as well - the absolute contrast of two worlds existing at once. Refugee stories, memoirs, and narratives, we feel, bring more to learners than just a photo, a number, or a graph. They share the experience of what it means to be human, especially during desperate ordeals…they model strength and perseverance, while demonstrating risk-taking and goal-setting. They are proof of the fragility of political systems and evidence of how quickly universal human rights and fundamental freedoms can be taken away.

To know elsewhere, is to know here. Through reading refugee stories and narratives, young people gain knowledge on what it means to be a better human being: What are their responsibilities to others? What responsibilities do they have to the histories they are taught and will one day tell for themselves? What responsibilities do they have to their own education and actions? How might they advocate for, and with, individuals who aren’t born with the privileges to ask such questions?

Ger states there’s an obligation to educate young people, as his story and journey are not only about struggle, experience, and luck, but a way to share self-doubt, worry, and human transformation. In Sudan, he learned to repeat the phrase, “As within, so without,” a reminder of his responsibility to others within a larger community. He often shares, “I owe it to life to bring more of me into the world. There’s an obligation to give back and be more for others.”

Similarly, Abdi recently had his memoir adapted for teen readers so Western youth could read honest stories about the world, rather than fictional and fantastical speculations on what life could be about (e.g., The Hunger Games, Scythe, etc.). Human conflict and extreme violence are an every day reality in many parts of the world and not not just a form of entertainment. He wanted to share a memoir not commonly  available to adolescents. “I see it as my responsibility to make young people feel comfortable around others who are not from the same background,” he says. “Teens, no matter where they are born, what skin color they have, or what faith or cultural background they come from, deserve to know they have more things in common with others than differences.” This includes a lifetime of facing adversity, contending with difficult challenges, and overcoming day-to-day struggles.
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Our kinship comes from a belief in our human capacity to be compassionate, to harbor others (Woodson, 2018) with love and care, to organize and act for what is right, and to always hope for a better tomorrow. We share what might be considered critical civic empathy (Mirra, 2018) - that is, a desire to always analyze our position, power, and privilege while maintaining a strong focus on personal experiences, a belief in democratic dialogue and civic action, and a commitment to equity and justice. In contrast, we recognize it is within this same human capacity to cripple others through hate, envy, greed, and ignorance…the primary causes for today’s political conflict, oppression, and even genocide.
           
Right now, there’s an unprecedented level of human instability, a catalyst for major mobility around the planet (both by choice and by force). For this reason, we feel World Refugee Day 2021 is more urgent than ever. At a time when we put these words to page for an audience of teachers, readers, scholars, librarians, and YAL-enthusiasts (a privileged space, indeed), we recognize fellow human beings are escaping from armed conflicts, poverty, food insecurity, persecution, and human rights violations, and others are responding to the adverse effects of climate change and disease (such as Covid-19).
           
​World Refugee Day 2021, then, must be a call to our government and stakeholders to take bold actions. In the United States, we must encourage congress to restore American traditions of welcoming the most vulnerable populations into the country, which includes raising the admission cap for refugees. Human togetherness triumphs over individualism, isolation, and ignorance. The collective of many united for a common good is better panacea for that which ills us. It has taken many across the United States: teachers, doctors, scientists, parents, nurses, politicians, families, laborers, etc. to counter this difficult year. We are strong when we focus on commonalities and weaker when we fixate on differences. As Abdi shares,
When I was a teen living on the dusty streets of Mogadishu I listened to music, watched movies, and danced at weddings. I played soccer and went out with girls. American teens may not think we can do that in our countries or with a refugee status. I write to tell them that we are as humans as they are. And once they know, they understand we are like them. Not different from them, which helps create a world where we can live together despite where we come from.

We are, always, as human as they (we) are. 

We invite parents, teachers, students, scholars, and lovers of young adult literature to include refugee narratives in their libraries to help counter the misconceptions of refugees as powerless, weak individuals. As Ger notes, “refugee stories bond us and help us to make human connections….to witness the ways human beings triumph over extreme circumstances…and most importantly, relate us with a larger meaning to life.” Hence, a respect for June 20th, 2021 - World Refugee Day - is a location to honor refugees everywhere, and to applaud individuals and organizations who work with support and respect for all humanity.      
4 Books from 2020 to Help Celebrate World Refugee Day with Teens. In honor of World Refugee Day, 2021, we highlight four books published in the past year, including Abdi and Ger’s memoirs. These YA texts are ready to incite conversations about refugee experiences, stories, and realities. We recognize that when in conversation with many, the dialogue grows richer. Many literary traditions are a privilege of Western society, as written language and publishing traditions have gone hand in hand with power. America remains a flickering light of hope around the world, where the sun continues to rise with wonder, and where scattered stars often guide the desperate against the tempests. As we briefly highlight these four books, we ask readers to ask themselves, “What can I do to be a better human being?”
 
Iftin, A. N. (2020). Call Me American: The Extraordinary True Story of a Young Somali Immigrant. New York: Random House Children’s Books.
​Abdi Nor Iftin published Call Me American - a Memoir on his birthday in 2018 (coincidentally, World Refugee Day). Two years later, Delacorte Press, an Imprint of Random House Children’s Books, adapted his memoir for young adult readers with Max Alexander. As a child, Abdi Nor Iftin cheered on American soldiers when they arrived to war-torn Mogadishu, Somalia, when warlords and fighting fractions created divisions across their nation. As a fan of American action films, Abdi saw these men and women as heroic and working to bring a better world to his country. Yet, cheering on the Western world, wearing American styles and dancing to American music, became extremely dangerous when the radical Islamist group al-Shabaab came to power in 2006. His language skills and passion for democracy had to go underground, but eventually found audiences through secret  radio dispatches. He was forced to flee from Somalia to Kenya, before winning entrance to migrate to the United States - a reminder of exactly why the idea of democracy in America still allures many looking for a better life. 
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Duany, G. (2020). Walk Towards the Rising Sun: From Child Soldier to Ambassador of Peace. New York: Random House Children’s Books.
​In September of last year, Random House Children’s Books, under Christopher Myer’s Make Me a World Imprint, published Ger Duany’'s memoir, Walk Toward the Rising Sun - From Child Soldier to Ambassador of Peace with Garen Thomas. It is a memoir of immigration, a flight from political conflict, a model of perseverance, and a demonstration of human spirit, hope, optimism, drive, and purpose. Ger Duany’s memoir is the autobiography of young man intended to have a life with cattle and Turkana traditions, who found a world turned upside down after his village was attacked by the North Sudanese military. Death was introduced to him wherever he looked, and he soon found himself as a child-soldier, fighting back with resistance. Yet, the promise for a better world and for a greater humanity was always on his mind, and in the 1990s, he found himself boarding a plane without any family to seek refuge in the United States. American school didn’t make sense to him, nor did Western teenagers, but he did his best to fit in and to find a routine in his a country. He discovered basketball, then acting, which followed with modeling. Still, PTSD came at him as he tried to find meaning. With a childhood disrupted, the loss of family and loved ones, and the enduring racism of the United States, he wrote his memoir to find voice and a way to do more. His memoir models the power of storytelling, and for writing to find one’s self wherever they are within a journey.
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Jamieson, V., & Mohamed, O. (2020). When Stars are Scattered. New York: Dial Books: Penguin Random House.
​As a National Book Award Finalist and New York Times Best Seller, Omar Mohamad and Victoria Jamieson illustrate the lived experiences of Omar and his nonverbal younger brother Hassan and their challenges experienced in Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya. The collaborative graphic-novel highlights the importance of education, maintaining a sense of humor, overcoming heartbreak, and believing in hope. Through the middle-grade storytelling, readers learn a how some individuals overcome devastating circumstance through the power of community and empathy, especially as they fight against trauma and despair. The story offers space for young readers to visualize, learn, and understand the struggles of living as displaced youth. 
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​Anderson, L. H., & Delduca, L. (2020). Wonder Woman: Tempest Tossed. Burbank, CA: DC Comics.
Published by DC Comics, this graphic novel shares the origin story of Diana Prince and the relocation to Queens, New York, after experiencing life in a refugee camp in Greece. Through Anderson’s depiction of yet another female warrior, and with Delduca’s brilliant illustrations, readers get Wonder Woman in her teenage years before she goes on a full-fledged mission for global justice. Her experience of life as a refugee counters the idyllic, privileged utopia known on the island of Themyscira. In the United States, she sets forward on a mission to help the less fortunate and to fight against any and all who exploit human beings, including those who traffic children. This is Diana Prince as a political activist and humanitarian…a first step before realizing her total powers.
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​We also have an additional list of refugee stories that may be added to personal and public libraries in support of refugee narratives. We encourage others to build on this list and to add refugee stories that extend beyond the late 20th, early 21st century, as well.
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Ger Duany is a survivor of the tragic exodus of an estimated 20,000 Sudanese children, the "Lost boys of Sudan," and has been appointed as UN Goodwill Ambassador. Born in the town of Akobo, Ger was caught up in Sudan's north-south civil war and was forcefully recruited as a child soldier. At the age of 14, he managed to escape to neighbouring Ethiopia and was eventually resettled to the United States from the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya. In 2014, UNHCR helped Ger reunite with his mother and other family members in Kenya's Kakuma refugee camp. He is also a model and actor. To learn more about Ger, his inspiring life story, and his constant work to help refugees around the world, visit GerDuany.com or @GerDuany on Twitter.​

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Abdi Nor Iftin is a naturally gifted speaker. His story, one of 60 Peabody finalists in 2015, has been featured on various radio and television stations; most recently on CNN. Abdi's stories are personal narratives of his life growing up in a country shredded by a civil war and finished off by islamists with the sheer luck to win a green card to immigrate to the United States in 2014. As a former refugee, a recent immigrant to the US and a Muslim, Abdi has received requests to speak at TEDX events, universities and colleges in Maine. His new book"Call Me American," was released in 2018 and is a finalist for New England's Bookseller's Association book awards. His features on NPR’s This American Life can be found at Abdi and the Golden Ticket and Abdi the American
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Bryan Ripley Crandall is Director of Connecticut Writing Project and Associate Professor of English Education at Fairfield University. His dissertation, "A Responsibility to Speak Out”: Perspectives on Writing From Black African-Born Males With Limited and Disrupted Formal Education received a Syracuse University doctoral prize for outstanding research. Crandall’s scholarship has appeared in several journals and books, advocating for best practices for teaching writing in diverse, inclusive settings. In 2018, Crandall received a Divergent Award from the Initiative for Literacy in a Digital age in recognition of his youth programming, including Ubuntu Academy - a literacy lab for immigrant and refugee youth.
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Interview with Ger Duany on the National Writing Project’s The Write Time.

​
Interview with Abi Nor Iftin on the National Writing Project’s The Write Time<https://youtu.be/u5AYWVB7cug>.
Referenced Work
Crandall, B. R. (2014). Lost voices in an American high school: Sudanese male English-language learners' perspectives on writing. In C. Compton-Lilly & E. Halverson (Eds.), Time and Space In Literacy Research (pp. 107-121). New York: Routledge.

Crandall, B. R. (2018). “History Should Come First”: Perspectives on Writing of Somali-Born, Refugee-Background Male Youth on Writing in and out of School. In R. F. Shawna Shapiro, Mary Jane Curry (Ed.), Educating Refugee-background Students: Critical Issues and Dynamic Contexts. Bristol: Multilingual Matters.

MacDonald, M. T. (2018). Cultivating a Global Perspective through Refugee Narratives. Creative Commons. Michigan.

Mirra, N. (2018). Educating for Empathy: Literacy Learning and Civic Engagement. Columbia University: Teachers College Press

Muhammad, G. (2020). Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy. New York: Scholastic.

Perry, K. (2008). From storytelling to writing: transforming literacy among Sudanese refugees. Journal of Literacy Research, 40, 317-388. doi:10.1080/10862960802502196

Roxas, K. (2010). Who really wants "The tired, the poor, and the huddled masses" anyway?: Teachers' use of cultural scripts with refugee students in public schools. Multicultural Perspectives, 12(2), 65-73.
​
Woodson, J. (2018). Harbor Me. New York: Penguin Random House.
Until next week.
Kathleen Decker
9/2/2023 11:24:45 pm

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    Dr. Steve Bickmore
    ​Creator and Curator

    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
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    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and writing program administrator at Aquinas College, where she teaches writing and language arts methods.   She is also a Co-Director of the UNLV Summit on the Research and Teaching of Young Adult Literature. She lives with her four girls and a five-pound Yorkshire Terrier in west Michigan.

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    Meet
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    Evangile is a native of Kigali, Rwanda. He is a college student that Steve meet while working in Rwanda as a missionary. In fact, Evangile was one of the first people who translated his English into Kinyarwanda. 

    Steve recruited him to help promote Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media while Steve is doing his mission work. 

    He helps Dr. Bickmore promote his academic books and sometimes send out emails in his behalf. 

    You will notice that while he speaks fluent English, it often does look like an "American" version of English. That is because it isn't. His English is heavily influence by British English and different versions of Eastern and Central African English that is prominent in his home country of Rwanda.

    Welcome Evangile into the YA Wednesday community as he learns about Young Adult Literature and all of the wild slang of American English vs the slang and language of the English he has mastered in his beautiful country of Rwanda.  

    While in Rwanda, Steve has learned that it is a poor English speaker who can only master one dialect and/or set of idioms in this complicated language.

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