Chicago Sun-Times

Working at this paper represents my ‘ American Dream’— #SupportSun­Times

- MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA mihejirika@ suntimes. com | @ maudlynei

The 174- year- old Chicago SunTimes was my “American Dream.” As simple as that. I was hired straight out of graduate school at the oldest continuous­ly published newspaper in Chicago, which became part of my life at age 6.

That’s when I first read the tabloid tome that my immigrant father would read religiousl­y, every Sunday at the kitchen table. This fed my developing appetite for all forms of literature.

As Dad keyed in on my love of reading, he’d spread the newspaper out on the table for me to choose sections that interested me— in the early days, only the comics— then he’d pull me up onto his lap.

Together, we’d read his trusted Sun- Times.

Why I am writing this

Recently, we reached out to you, our longtime readers.

We asked you to please support our daily work by subscribin­g to our website for $ 7.49 a month, less than 25 cents a day.

Until now, we’ve offered our online content for free.

But we can no longer afford that business model.

Now known as the hardestwor­king paper in America, we have been part of Chicago for a very long time, offering a diverse and unflinchin­gly brave perspectiv­e very much aligned with middle America’s hard- working families.

It is a perspectiv­e that has informed my immigrant experience, as the child of Nigerian immigrants who came to America under the worst of circumstan­ces— fleeing a nation ravaged by ethnic cleansing and famine.

My family story

My family arrived in Chicago on June 9, 1969, refugees of the 19661970 Nigerian- BiafranWar. The first time starvation was used as a tool of mass destructio­n, 2 million of my Igbo tribe were massacred or starved to death.

We settled on the city’s Near South Side, and like most immigrant families chasing the American Dream, my parents eventually moved their seven children to the suburbs, seeking better schooling, opportunit­ies.

I chronicled their amazing story in my recent book, “Escape From Nigeria: A Memoir of Faith, Love and War,” telling how my father had been attending Northweste­rn University after the war broke out, severing all communicat­ion with the outside world.

It recounts how one of his professors, with his wife and four other North Shore couples, joined to help my father locate our family in the midst of a raging war— through stealth communicat­ion with missionari­es— and then raise funds and secure congressio­nal help to obtain refugee visas.

We arrived with the clothes on our backs.

But with hard work and sacrifice — that non- wavering characteri­stic of middle America— my parents struggled to give their children every possible bootstrap.

I can still see us sitting at that kitchen table on a Sunday afternoon, sun streaming through the window, the Sun- Times spread out, the feel of newsprint between my fingers. I shared that tradition with my father until he passed in 1981, leaving my mother to struggle to finance our college education on her own.

In the end, their children would be successful— this one obtaining her master’s in journalism from Northweste­rn University in 1987— a full- circle moment— and starting her job as a cub reporter at the Sun- Times months later.

What the Sun- Times means today

Today, my “Chicago Chronicles” columns profile the people and places that make Chicago tick, with a spotlight on Chicago’s black and brown communitie­s. My column is just one of many offerings representa­tive of our Sun- Times commitment to diversity— not only in our writers, but in content reflecting the melting pot of communitie­s we serve in our great city.

We’ve said it before. But did you know the percentage of legitimate Internet sites generating relevant, original content is only about 3 percent of the world’s 329 million websites? It’s because the economics are brutal.

And did you know Google and Facebook dominate digital advertisin­g— collecting 73 percent of all such revenue, while all other companies compete for the rest of that pie?

Add to that the decline of print advertisin­g year after year, and you’ll know it’s been an impossible business model.

Our new digital- subscripti­on model is critical to sustain the laborinten­sive, quality local journalism you’ve come to expect from us.

Again, we’ve said it before. We tell stories that matter to the working men and women of our city — in print, video, podcasts, live online. And we do this because we have Chicago’s back.

We do this because you and I — we— have shared experience­s. We are middle America. And the Sun- Times chronicles our American Dream.

How to subscribe

We’re asking you to support our work by subscribin­g to our website for $ 7.49 amonth— less than 25 cents a day. That’s a small price to pay for journalism that is 100 percent honest and unflinchin­gly brave.

 ?? FAMILYPHOT­O ?? The Ihejirika family after settling in Chicago. That's me seated second from right.
FAMILYPHOT­O The Ihejirika family after settling in Chicago. That's me seated second from right.
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