Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» Refugee’s journey:

King student publishes book

- JOHN SCHMID

A Rufus King student has published a book about her journey as a refugee who fled the civil war in Somalia.

At a time when the United Nations says the world has never seen so many refugees, with tens of millions displaced by war and persecutio­n, Milwaukee teenager Zeynab Ali is just one more.

Born in a refugee tent village in Kenya to parents forced to flee the Somali civil war, Ali landed in the United States when she was 6. She’s been watching an anti-immigratio­n backlash take hold in one western nation after another. But what Ali and her family witnessed on their odyssey — starvation, anarchy, mindless killings — are facets that don’t always make their way into the emotionall­y charged debate on immigratio­n.

“Some people don’t understand the sacrifices that immigrants make,” she said.

The 18-year-old senior at Rufus King High School, in between applicatio­ns to college, just self-published a book meant to add her voice to one of the nation’s most complicate­d political issues.

“Cataclysm: Secrets of the Horn of Africa” is part history of Somalia and part personal memoir. And because Ali’s story involves one of the world’s most “unstable and dangerous” nations, in the words of a U.S. State Department travel warning, her book deals with the traumatic extremes of the modern refugee experience.

Ali’s chapters on Somali history are written in a matter-of-fact style, beginning with European colonialis­m and spanning national independen­ce in 1960 and the famine and political chaos that followed.

The personal narratives, however, are anything but academic. They begin with firsthand accounts Ali learned from her parents, whose educations didn’t even include grade school because Somali warlords destroyed

schools along with the economy. She describes the murder of her mother’s father — which took place in front of her young mother — at the hands of bloodthirs­ty bandits who pillaged and raped in the Somali villages.

Post-traumatic anxiety is common for political refugees, Ali said, citing her research and personal experience. Her father witnessed his share of bloodshed and used to scream in his sleep.

Ali describes her childhood in the refugee camps across the border in Kenya, including the time a scorpion stung her and made her sick with hallucinat­ions. Food and civility were in short supply. She often didn’t see her parents, who worked long hours for pocket change, but lauds them for their values.

And she describes her family’s integratio­n into the U.S. Ali’s own English is flawless, even though it’s not her native tongue. Her parents, who barely speak rudimentar­y English, hold together a family of eight children by working menial jobs. She’ll be the first in her family to go to college.

In an interview, Ali said money couldn’t be tighter at home, but her parents continue to send a portion of their income back home to surviving relatives in Somalia.

Anti-crime activism

Social conditions in Milwaukee, the nation’s third most impoverish­ed city, in some ways remind Ali of the world she fled. “The poverty rate in Milwaukee and obviously the violence are similar,” differing, of course, in degree and extremity, she said.

It’s because she doesn’t want to see her adoptive city slide further into urban distress that she has become an anti-crime activist in her spare time, Ali said.

Even without the book, she’s well-known to civic leaders and law enforcemen­t agencies. She’s active in Safe & Sound, a crime-prevention nonprofit that acts as a liaison between urban residents and a gamut of law enforcemen­t agencies, building a crucial bridge at a time of heightened distrust of police. A year ago, Safe & Sound honored Ali with its annual “Youth Leader Award.”

Four weeks ago, the Interfaith Conference of Greater Milwaukee awarded Ali its “Young Adult Leadership” award, recognizin­g her participat­ion with multiple community groups — including co-founding and chairing Inspiratio­nal Impact, an organizati­on that tackles human traffickin­g, a criminal practice of conning and coercing young people into prostituti­on. “The average age of a human traffickin­g victim is 12 to 14,” she said.

“Zeynab is a true inspiratio­n and role model for all,” said Safe & Sound Executive Director Katie Sanders, who admires Ali’s “incredible community leadership, activism and involvemen­t in social issues.”

Ali reflects another attribute of modern immigrants, as evidenced by statistics: “Immigrants are twice as likely to become entreprene­urs as native-born Americans,” according to the Kauffman Foundation. And Ali displays her share of entreprene­urial zeal.

While most upwardboun­d high school seniors are content to complete major term papers, Ali’s book was entirely extracurri­cular. As digital change lowered the barriers in the once-elite world of book publishing, she opted to self-publish rather than submit her work to establishe­d imprints. As of last month, her book has been available in hardcover, paperback and e-book via online vendors such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble. Under the rules of self publishing, she needed to pay publishing house Xlibris, so she crowdsourc­ed as much as she could. Her parents pitched in a few hundred hard-earned dollars to make up the difference.

Most are children

The topic of Ali’s book couldn’t be more timely. “We are now witnessing the highest levels of displaceme­nt on record,” according to the U.N. Refugee Agency. What’s more, Somalia is one of only three nations that produced more than half of all the world’s political refugees — the other two are Syria and Afghanista­n, the agency found. Over half the world’s refugees are children.

“Not many people know there are refugees in the city — Burmese, Arab, Hmong and some African,” Ali said of Milwaukee.

The U.S. found itself ensnared in Somalia in the 1990s, leading a peacekeepi­ng mission that degenerate­d into the bloody 1993 Battle of Mogadishu. The U.S. no longer stations diplomats in Somalia and warns Americans to stay away because of “kidnapping, bombings, murder, illegal roadblocks, banditry and other violent incidents.”

Syria and its civilian slaughter and precarious boatloads of desperate migrants have drawn the most attention to the world’s refugee crisis. But it was Warsan Shire, another young Kenyan-born Somali refugee woman, who wrote what many consider the global anthem of the humanitari­an refugee crisis. The lines appear in Shire’s ironically titled poem called “Home”:

“You have to understand

That no one puts their children in a boat

Unless the water is safer than the land”

 ?? FRANK MILLER ?? Zeynab Ali, 18, is a Kenyan-born Somali refugee, a Rufus King High School senior and author of a book on her life journey.
FRANK MILLER Zeynab Ali, 18, is a Kenyan-born Somali refugee, a Rufus King High School senior and author of a book on her life journey.
 ?? PAT A. ROBINSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Zeynab Ali (center), 18, sits with her father, Osman Hassan, and mother, Isha Adan, in their north side home. Ali was born in a Kenyan refugee camp to parents who fled the Somali war.
PAT A. ROBINSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Zeynab Ali (center), 18, sits with her father, Osman Hassan, and mother, Isha Adan, in their north side home. Ali was born in a Kenyan refugee camp to parents who fled the Somali war.

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