Somali Bantu refugees started arriving in Salt
Lake City, Utah.
By Tim Sullivan
The Salt
Lake Tribune
The
languages Awes Muhina speaks are mile markers on the tortuous route that led him
from Somalia to Salt Lake City. Mushunguli is the dialect of Muhina's Bantu
tribe, but because the Bantus endure second-class citizenship in Somalia, he
also speaks two mainstream languages, Afmay and Afmaxa. He had to learn Swahili
when he fled Somalia during its civil war, walking for five weeks to reach a
refugee camp in Kenya.
"And now," Muhina
says in his new apartment in Salt Lake City, "we are going to learn English."
Muhina, his wife,
Masala Muya, and their three young children arrived in Utah last week as one of
the first Bantu refugee families to resettle here. During the next two years,
the New York-based International Rescue Committee plans to resettle 230 Bantu
families in the Salt Lake area, says director Edie Sidle. Catholic Community
Services will be welcoming a few hundred more.
The influx of
what will probably be more than 1,000 Somali s to the Wasatch Front will create
a sizable Bantu community where none existed before.
And it is not
an exaggeration to say that most Bantus will be happy to be here. While all
refugee groups have endured hardships in their home countries and on their paths
to the United States, the Bantus have had it particularly bad. As the lowest
caste in a country ruined by more than a decade of civil war, they have suffered
on several different levels.
Distinguished from
other Somalis by physical traits like a bigger nose, bigger lips and darker
skin, Bantus have experienced discrimination in Somalia since they immigrated
there from central Africa about 200 years ago and were enslaved. That prejudice,
Muhina says, has ranged from name calling to being systematically denied help
from the government. Few Bantus today attend any kind of school in Somalia.
In 2000, the United
States identified the Bantus as a priority for refugee resettlement and began
processing hundreds of thousands of them in refugee camps; 12,000 will come to
this country during the next three years. Salt Lake City was one of several
cities chosen because other Somali s have resettled here and because it is
considered safe, family-friendly and affordable, Sidle says.
Muhina's story
is typical of those of many other Bantus. He was born to a family of farmers who
grew fruit, corn and sorghum. School was out of the question, since the family
needed everyone to help work the land.
"I don't know how to read or
write in any language," Muhina says.
In 1992, when he was 14 and the civil war two
years old, Muhina left for Kenya. He describes running and walking for a week
straight without any sleep to reach the nearest major city. From there, it took
him a month to reach the Kenyan border. He ate grass and leaves, even clay. He
passed people dying in the street.
Muhina then spent 10
years in Kenyan refugee camps, where he met his wife and fathered his children,
now 5, 3 and 10 months old. Rape and theft were rampant in the camps, and during
the family's first night in Salt Lake City, Muhina lay awake until morning,
expecting someone to break into the apartment. No one did.
There is more good
news for Bantus arriving in Salt Lake City.
The differences
between Bantus and other Somalis seem to dissipate outside of Somalia, says
Ahmed M. Ali, the Muhinas' International Rescue Committee case worker and a
native Somali. Though ruling Somalian tribes like the Mareexaan also have
resettled in the Salt Lake area, Ali says, the distance between oppressor and
oppressed shrinks considerably when they are in a place where they have more
commonalities than differences -- and everyone has a chance at a good job and
place to live.
Soon after his
family arrived, Muhina says, a group of Somalian refugees brought him over some
food.
But because
the Bantus are starting from scratch in Salt Lake City, Sidle says, the
resettlement agencies must take some added measures. She compares the Bantus'
situation with that of the Lost Boys, the orphaned young men who came to the
United States from Sudan during the 1990s.
For the Lost Boys, who like the Bantus spent a long time in
refugee camps without access to education or technology, the IRC received
additional funding from the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement. The agency
designed extra classes and took the men to restaurants and the symphony. Sidle
says the IRC wants similar funds for the Bantus.
Meanwhile, Muhina already
seems to have realized the leadership role that he could assume among his
people. He says he wants government agencies and the public to know who the
Bantus are. And he wants to help incoming families.
"We're very lucky to be one
of the first families," Muhina says. "For future families coming here, I will do
the same as was done to me." World Refugee Day
* This year,
Utah will celebrate today's World Refugee Day at the Utah Arts Festival. A young
tradition in the United States, World Refugee Day began in Africa and spread
throughout the globe. The United Nations General Assembly dedicated June 20 to
refugees in 2000.
* From noon to 7:30
p.m. today, refugee artists will perform at the festival's South stage and on
the City-County Building's steps. They include: Sudanese Dancers, made up
largely of the Lost Boys; KOLO, a youth folklore group from Bosnia; Cesar
Sarmiento, a guitarist from Cuba; L'Chaim -- Russian Jewish Choir; Mario Micic,
a former member of the Bosnian band Modusi; Nedzad "Pasha" Pasalic, a Bosnian
artist; Trn od Ruz, a Bosnian folk group; and The United Christian Church of
Sudan Choir.