Toronto Star

An Iraqi in Trump country

- SARAH BIRNBAUM PRI’S THE WORLD

Dr. Chalak Berzingi fled his hometown in Iraq and ended up 10,000 kilometres away in America — in Trump country.

He works in a small, deeply conservati­ve Appalachia­n town. It might sound like a place that would be unwelcomin­g to a Muslim immigrant like him.

To the contrary, the people of Elkins, W. Va., have embraced Berzingi, and vice versa.

Elkins, which has a population of only about 7,000, is predominan­tly white and rural. It has one of the highest unemployme­nt rates in West Virginia. Elkins is located in an area that voted overwhelmi­ngly for U.S. President Donald Trump. So it’s not hard to imagine that there might be plenty of support here for Trump’s immigratio­n order against travellers from seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iraq.

And yet, says Berzingi, “I have been treated from day one . . . only with respect.”

Berzingi, a cardiologi­st, says he has a close bond with his patients.

“I’m connected to the community. I love the people. I love the place.” And, he says, his patients see that devotion and reciprocat­e.

“They come to me in the first place because they have a concern about their health and they want somebody who listens and understand­s. I pay attention and listen and do my best, and take (their concerns) into my heart. Over time, that builds a bond.”

Berzingi says since Trump’s immigratio­n restrictio­ns went into effect, his patients have gone out of their way to say nice things.

“Last Tuesday, one of my patients came to my office,” Berzingi recalls. “And he said, ‘I just want to let you know that . . . a large number of my fellow citizens went out and protested the travel ban just because we feel this probably will touch people like you.’ ”

But, Berzingi admits, his patients rarely discuss their political views or support for Trump with him.

“During my daily interactio­n with patients, it just doesn’t come up.”

He says he can’t explain their rationale for supporting Trump. “I still can’t understand it.”

Berzingi says he went into cardiology as a way to use his skills and earn enough so he could eventually go back to Iraqi Kurdistan. He thought he’d be most needed there. But then his youngest son was diagnosed with autism.

“So when this opportunit­y came in Elkins, I felt this was a place that needed me as bad as I would be (needed) in my hometown.”

West Virginia is medically underserve­d, Berzingi explains. “A small population is scattered over a large area. The resources are not available . . . That’s how I see my own country back home, where, if you can believe it, we didn’t have heart catheteriz­ations until the early 2000s.

“In Elkins, when I went down there and still (to this day), they didn’t have the sophistica­ted and advanced medical procedures that these population­s badly needed.”

Berzingi has come to see his work in Elkins as part of his duty as an American citizen.

“What made us come to the United States in the first place and go down to Elkins was a sense of belonging and citizenshi­p . . . In Elkins, I found a place that provides me with fulfilment.”

 ?? COURTESY OF CHALAK BERZINGI ?? Dr. Chalak Berzingi, pictured with his family, fled Iraq and now works in a deeply conservati­ve Appalachia­n town.
COURTESY OF CHALAK BERZINGI Dr. Chalak Berzingi, pictured with his family, fled Iraq and now works in a deeply conservati­ve Appalachia­n town.

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