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Imad
Hamad Featured in Detroit News as Michiganian of the Year
ADC
is delighted to report that the Detroit News unveiled in its Sunday
May 4 edition this year’s "Michiganians of the
Year." Included in the mix of 12 "citizens
both ordinary and exalted who have wrought the remarkable," is
ADC’s own Michigan Director Imad Hamad. Please visit
the site to read more about why the Detroit News finds these
individuals worthy of recognition:
http://www.detnews.com/specialreports/2003/michiganians/
Imad, along with his fellow Michiganians of the Year, will be
honored tomorrow, May 6, 2003, at a special reception at the Morels
Restaurant in Bingham Farms. Below also see the Detroit
News’ profile of Imad from Sunday’s edition of the paper.
It can be read online at:
http://www.detnews.com/2003/project/0305/02/x02-153148.htm
ADC is extremely proud of Imad Hamad's work and accomplishments, and
congratulates him on this well deserved and prestigious honor.
Imad Hamad
He worked so that Arab Americans can enjoy freedom
By Shantee' Woodards / The Detroit News
Imad Hamad's work day doesn't end when he leaves the Dearborn office
of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC).
Hamad can't even go to the grocery store or mall without people
recognizing him and asking his advice on different social service
and discrimination issues. And after five years with the ADC, Hamad
is beginning to get used to it.
"It's very demanding, very hectic," Hamad said. "This
job takes a lot of your time and attention, it takes you away from
your loved ones. Even when you're at home, your phone doesn't stop
ringing."
There are nearly 200,000 Arab Americans and Arab immigrants living
in Metro
Detroit -- the largest concentration of Arabs outside the Middle
East. About 30,000 people of Middle Eastern descent live in
Dearborn, nearly a third of the city's population.
The ADC, which has its national headquarters in Washington, D.C.,
promotes the civil rights of ethnic minorities. Hamad became the
Midwest regional director in 1998, after working for various
agencies as an interpreter, counselor and social worker. At the ADC,
Hamad represents the group through media interviews and community
events, takes charge of discrimination complaints that come to the
office and helps raise money for the organization.
A great portion of his time, Hamad says, is spent helping people who
simply walk into the office with wide-ranging concerns about
adapting to American life.
Hamad worked to provide legal access to Arabs detained after the
2001 terrorist attacks, and former Gov. John Engler appointed him to
the Arab American Advisory Council in 2001. The group was formed to
enhance the relationship between Arab Americans and government
leaders. Hamad's office also meets monthly with U.S. Attorney
Jeffrey Collins to discuss civil rights, profiling and other issues
that affect Arab Americans.
Hamad said he has been inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose
famous saying, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere," is depicted in Arabic in the above photo.
For his efforts, Hamad has been honored by the Dearborn Bar
Association, DTE Energy and the Detroit City Council. A
Congressional Record was issued to Hamad in 1999 for his
"tireless efforts to ... eradicate discrimination against
Americans of Arab descent."
"The ADC has been a tremendous force for good in our
community," said Ismael Hamed, executive director of the Arab
Community Center for Economic and Social Services (ACCESS).
"Its work has grown under his leadership."
Hamad was born in Lebanon as a Palestinian refugee. He came to the
United States in 1980 as a student at Louisiana Tech University. He
also took classes at the University of Toledo, but did not graduate.
In 1982, he joined a rally in San Francisco sponsored by the
Palestine Liberation Organization protesting Israel's invasion of
Lebanon. Because the PLO was viewed as a terrorist organization, his
participation led to a decades-long struggle with the Immigration
and Naturalization Service.
During the 1980s and 1990s, he faced numerous attempts by the
government to deport him. After a long battle, he finally became a
U.S. citizen in 2002.
"As painful as it was, I still consider myself lucky,"
Hamad said. "I owe the experience (of the struggle with the
INS) to making me what I am today. I'm not bitter, I'm
grateful."
His own struggle is what drives him to work for others, he said.
Hamad is married with three children, Sarah, 8, Nadeen, 7, and
Khaled, 5.
"I don't look at this job as the traditional job," Hamad
said. "It's a reflection of myself, my beliefs and my
philosophy. Without such convictions and a passion to work for
people, I don't think any of us would last more than a week."
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