The National - News

Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed: faith in our youth is shaping the UAE

- NICK WEBSTER

A solid relationsh­ip between the nation and its young people has made the UAE “what it is today”, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed said before Internatio­nal Youth Day.

The key issues that affect young people are highlighte­d by the internatio­nal community today.

Sheikh Mohammed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, took to Twitter to praise the Founding Father, Sheikh Zayed, for placing his confidence in young people.

Ministers also said that the country’s young people are well prepared to confront the challenges that lie ahead.

“It is a fitting occasion to recognise and celebrate the youth’s contributi­on to making a better future so they can deliver more achievemen­ts and introduce changes that improve the lifestyle of their community,’’ said Noura Al Kaabi, Minister of Culture and Knowledge Developmen­t.

“Since it was founded, the UAE has been heavily investing in the capacities of youth so they can gain modern skills and empower themselves to serve their community and state, and contribute to the nation’s progress and prosperity.”

The nation has firm plans building up to the UAE’s centennial in 2071, with a vision for developing young people to help shape long-term government work and make the UAE the best country in the world by that date.

The Dubai Electricit­y and Water Authority said it was committed to supporting Emirati youth by highlighti­ng their role in sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The authority’s Youth Council programmes include scholarshi­ps to help students to complete their studies at home or abroad.

Through the Campus for Occupation­al and Academic Developmen­t, young people are trained in the fields of electrical and mechanical engineerin­g, maintenanc­e and operation.

“We believe that our success is built by our youth,” said Saeed Al Tayer, the authority’s chief executive. “We depend on them to achieve the number one rank. We are committed to engaging them in shaping the country’s future.”

The UAE’s dedication to its young people began with Founding Father Sheikh Zayed, and that philosophy is now found at all levels of government and society

The victory of Rashida Tlaib in the Democratic Party primary for Michigan’s 13th congressio­nal district is being widely hailed as historic. But its real significan­ce is largely misunderst­ood.

In November, Ms Tlaib will not face a Republican opponent because her district is so heavily Democratic that the GOP hasn’t bothered to put up a candidate. That means she is almost certain to become the first Muslim American woman member of Congress.

That’s very important. But the bigger breakthrou­gh is more complex and, in many ways, much more unlikely.

Ms Tlaib won’t be the first Arab-American in the House of Representa­tives. At least a score of Arab-Americans, many of them women, preceded her.

She won’t be the first Palestinia­n-American either. Justin Amash already represents a conservati­ve Michigan district. There have even been at least two Palestinia­n Americans in the Senate: John Sununu and his son, also called John Sununu, both represente­d New Hampshire in the Senate.

She’s not going to be the first Muslim American in the House either. Keith Ellison of Minnesota and Andre Carson of Indiana are already serving.

She will indeed be the first Muslim woman in Congress but that’s not really the central point either.

The historic significan­ce of Ms Tlaib’s extraordin­ary victory is that she will be the Arab-American member of Congress fully produced by and completely representi­ng her community.

For all her predecesso­rs in Congress, whether they are Arab-American or Muslim, these identities were, at most, incidental to their political identity and success. Some played them down. Others embraced them quietly. But none have highlighte­d and even campaigned on their identity, as Ms Tlaib has so proudly done.

The same applies to Mr Ellison and Mr Carson, the Muslim politician­s. Both are African-American converts to Islam. Neither have particular­ly Islamic names and it’s very likely that they are largely regarded by their constituen­ts as trustworth­y politician­s who, probably incidental­ly, happen to be Muslims. Neither shied away from their religious affiliatio­n but they didn’t campaign on it either.

Ms Tlaib is truly a product of not merely the Arab-American community. Far more significan­tly, the lawyer, the eldest of 14 children born to Palestinia­n immigrants, is the first fully fledged member of the Arab-American activist cadre to break so deeply into the political mainstream.

She has worked with a number of significan­t Arab-American organisati­ons in Michigan and nationally.

Ms Tlaib takes over from 89-year-old John Conyers, who held the seat for more than five decades before stepping down in December after a spate of sexual harassment allegation­s from several female staffers, which he denied.

She fought her own battle against sexual harassment in 2012 when she accused Imad Hamad, the Michigan director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimina­tion Committee, of hounding her 13 years earlier. In an open letter to ADC’s headquarte­rs in Washington, Ms Tlaib came out publicly as a victim of Mr Hamad. Despite not getting the support of the board of directors, more women came forward and Mr Hamad retired the same year.

Until now all the Arab-Americans in Congress have been Christians, which is significan­t. All the Muslim Americans previously have been African-Americans, which is also telling.

Those of us who have followed the political fortunes of the Arab-American community have understood that it was no accident that while there were Arabs and Muslims in Congress, there weren’t any Muslim Arab-Americans.

That’s partly because the Arab-American community used to be much more heavily Christian and Christian parts of the community were more assimilate­d and well-establishe­d. Much the same applies to African-American Muslims.

But it’s also partly because in the post-9/11 environmen­t, one could more or less get away with being an Arab or a Muslim, but not both.

That’s the real glass ceiling Ms Tlaib has shattered. Of course it’s significan­t that she’s going to be the first Muslim woman in Congress. But that’s not the biggest breakthrou­gh.

Indeed, Ms Tlaib ran, openly and proudly, on a trifecta of politicall­y stigmatise­d and marginalis­ed identities: Arab, Palestinia­n and Muslim. That she did so as a woman and won is all the more remarkable.

Obviously it’s no accident she’s been elected in Michigan, home of the largest Arab-American community in the United States and that, by taking Mr Conyers’ seat, she will be representi­ng much of Detroit.

But it’s also perversely predictabl­e that she has been elected in the Donald Trump era. American politics tends to swing wildly between polar opposites. The cool, aloof and cerebral African-American law professor Barack Obama has given way to the raging, white nationalis­t, reality TV star Mr Trump.

Mr Trump’s domination of American politics is counter-intuitivel­y opening the door for many advances that might otherwise be impossible, including Ms Tlaib’s stunning victory. His vitriol is mainstream­ing certain ideas and identities in an equal and opposite reaction.

It’s very American that with the travel ban in place affecting Muslim-majority countries, a Palestinia­n-American Muslim woman will have a seat in the next Congress.

She represents everything the current president opposes: she’s a democratic socialist in favour of universal healthcare, a Palestinia­n, a Muslim and the daughter of immigrants from a place very unlike Norway.

Indeed, Ms Tlaib’s campaign for Congress essentiall­y began when she was arrested for heckling Mr Trump in 2016. No wonder she won.

Perversely, Trump’s vitriol might have helped her win the Michigan primary by opening the door to opposing narratives

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