The Commercial Appeal

Where Trump’s travel ban hits home

- Jennifer Peltz ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – At the New York City convenienc­e store where he works the overnight shift, Radad Alborati takes a sip of coffee and surveys his life.

His wife is stuck in war-torn Yemen after his yearslong effort to bring her to the U.S. ended last month with a few phrases on a letter from an embassy.

“Ineligible for a visa” because of President Donald Trump’s restrictio­ns on immigratio­n and travel from certain countries. “A waiver will not be granted.”

“Today’s decision cannot be appealed.”

As the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to hear arguments this week on Trump’s travel ban, its effects are playing out for Alborati and others from Manhattan to Minnesota to the Middle East. Whatever the outcome of the legal debate between an administra­tion that says the policy is a national security necessity and challenger­s who say it’s discrimina­tory, it is already shaping lives and plans.

New York; Sanaa, Yemen

Alborati got visas for his and his wife’s three sons last fall, while the travel ban was temporaril­y blocked by a court. He was relieved to be able to bring the boys, ages 10 through 16, to New York. But they’re not living with him or one another. They’re bunking with three separate sets of family friends because he doesn’t want to leave them home alone during his midnight-to-noon workdays.

The savings he had hoped to put toward buying the family a house in New Jersey are gone. They were swallowed by costs of getting the family to visa interviews in Djibouti – the U.S. Embassy in Yemen closed because of the war – and staying there during a five-month wait for his wife’s denial, he said.

“I never felt like that’s the America I was dreaming about,” says Alborati, 38, who followed an older brother to the U.S. at 15 and became a citizen in 2010.

He applied two years later to bring his wife, whom he has known since childhood, and the family they built during his visits to Yemen.

“I get that you want to make the country safer – not that way,” he says. “Separating families, that’s sick.”

With the visa denial, Alborati went back to New York to provide for the children. His wife, 33, returned to a country where three years of fighting between rebels and a Saudi-led coalition, backing an internatio­nally recognized government, have killed over 10,000 people.

On twice-daily phone calls, he hears the fear in her voice. He worries, tries to keep his sons’ spirits up and hopes the Supreme Court will give his family another chance to be together.

“This is my real life. That’s what I’m fighting for,” Alborati says, holding a photo of him and his sons. “This country is built on family. And this is my family.”

Tiburon, Calif.; Tehran, Iran

Fresh from finishing his master’s degree in filmmaking in San Francisco, Payam Jafari wanted to celebrate his accomplish­ment and his 26th birthday last August with his family back home in Iran. But he didn’t make the trip.

His student visa allowed him to come and go. But Jafari remembered how the initial ban, which for a time barred even people with prior permission to come to the U.S., came suddenly while he was in Iran for winter break in January 2017 and almost derailed his return for his final semester at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco.

Since then, he has felt like he can’t take a chance on going home, lest the rules abruptly change again.

“I cannot risk it, although I want to see my family so bad,” he says. “I’m in the middle of my project I spent five years of my life on.”

As Jafari raises funds to make his first feature film, he and his relatives in Tehran aren’t sure when they’ll see one another next. Their uncertaint­y about U.S. travel policy weighs on his mom, Mehrnoosh: “Waiting for what will happen in the end – this is very difficult for a mother,” she said by email.

Adds his sister, Parastoo, “Politics treats everyone in the world’s lives like toys. We all get burned in the end by it.”

Cincinnati, Paris

The video projected in a Cincinnati theater showed three Syrian dancers in a piece inspired by the lives of their fellow citizens amid the civil war that has ravaged their homeland. But onstage, only two dancers performed the piece in its U.S. premiere on a January night.

The third hadn’t been allowed into the country.

A week earlier, it wasn’t clear the show would go on at all. The Contempora­ry Arts Center in Cincinnati and New York-based immigratio­n lawyer Matthew Covey were scrambling to seek a travel ban waiver for Syrian choreograp­her Mithkal Alzghair and two fellow dancers to perform his “Displaceme­nt.”

The ban allows for case-by-case waivers, but they have been relatively scarce. More than 8,400 people sought to travel from the listed countries in the first month after the latest version took effect Dec. 8, according to the State Department. About 450 have been granted, according to a letter that Democratic Sens. Chris Van Hollen, Chris Murphy and Richard Blumenthal sent Thursday to administra­tion officials. The letter, obtained by the AP, seeks more informatio­n about the waiver process.

The arts center’s Drew Klein recalls word came with just six days to go: The Paris-based Alzghair could come, with only one of the other dancers.

Watching from the audience, artist Kate Kern noticed the third dancer in the video and later learned why he wasn’t there. “It really brought home the effects of the travel ban,” she says.

St. Cloud, Minn.; Nairobi, Kenya

When Abdisalan Mohamed Jele, 31, brought his two young sons from Kenya to Minnesota, he thought his wife and new baby girl would follow two weeks later.

Jele and his wife, Nimo Abdi Hassan, 32, are from Somalia, which has been ravaged by civil war for a quarter-century. He came to the U.S. in 2007, became a citizen five years later and rejoiced when she was issued a visa shortly after giving birth last year. But the visa expired before she could get the newborn a passport. The couple figured a new visa would be issued quickly.

Instead, the family has been waiting six months, with no reunion in sight. A March 8 email from the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, where Hassan lives, says the travel ban makes her ineligible for a visa, but consular officials are reviewing the possibilit­y of a waiver.

Their sons, 7 and 4, sometimes ask when their mother is coming. Jele tries to reassure them: “Soon. Soon.”

“It’s so hard,” he says, wiping tears from his cheeks. “I’m American. I don’t know why my family can’t come here.”

 ?? AMY ?? Radad Alborati’s wife is stuck in war-torn Yemen after his yearslong effort to sons, Hamza Abdisalan Mohamed, 7, left, and Mohamed-Amin Abdisalan Mohamed, 4, are U.S. citizens of Somali descent living in St. Cloud, Minn. FORLITI/AP
AMY Radad Alborati’s wife is stuck in war-torn Yemen after his yearslong effort to sons, Hamza Abdisalan Mohamed, 7, left, and Mohamed-Amin Abdisalan Mohamed, 4, are U.S. citizens of Somali descent living in St. Cloud, Minn. FORLITI/AP
 ?? CONTEMPORA­RY ARTS CENTER, CINCINNATI, VIA AP ?? bring her to the U.S. ended last month, when a U.S. consulate said she was ineligible for a waiver from President Donald Trump’s restrictio­ns on travel from certain countries. MARY ALTAFFER/AP Two Syrian dancers perform “Displaceme­nt” with a projection...
CONTEMPORA­RY ARTS CENTER, CINCINNATI, VIA AP bring her to the U.S. ended last month, when a U.S. consulate said she was ineligible for a waiver from President Donald Trump’s restrictio­ns on travel from certain countries. MARY ALTAFFER/AP Two Syrian dancers perform “Displaceme­nt” with a projection...
 ??  ?? Abdisalan Mohamed Jele, 31, and his
Abdisalan Mohamed Jele, 31, and his

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