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“What makes Detroit special to me is all the Arabic grocery stores and Islamic centers,” he said. “Everybody treats me well.”

Fahman Amri, Albokhshem’s friend, is already experiencing the success the international student is seeking.

Amri immigrated to the United States from Yemen 15 years ago. He moved to Detroit in 2009 and now owns 14 homes here.

As a handyman, Amri is taking advantage of the Detroit Land Bank auctions. The city is auctioning abandoned properties from a starting price of $1,000 on the condition that the new owner bring the home up to habitable code within six months.

Amri is fixing the houses himself to sell or rent, mostly to other Arab American immigrants. But his investment in Detroit is not only financial; it is also personal. Amri, a father of six, said he hopes his children remain in the city after they grow up.

“This is my home,” he said. “I am staying here, not going anywhere.”

Iraqi American resident Riyadh Musa, who arrived in the city as a refugee 20 years ago, said a new wave of immigrants from his home country is helping stabilize the Warrendale neighborhood.

“They report anybody who is selling drugs or has a gun; they’re not used to it,” he said.

Detroit lost more than 25 percent of its population over the past 12 years. Fewer than 700,000 residents remain.

Vice President Joe Biden called Detroit a “comeback city” in September. Residents say services are improving. There are more buses and street lights. Downtown businesses are thriving. But the shrinking residential base remains an obstacle to Detroit’s comeback.

City leaders and organizers are aiming to attract newcomers from outside the country to help with repopulation.

Detroit is already home to 36,000 immigrants.

Despite national and state efforts to pause resettlement of Syrian refugees in the country because of safety concerns, Detroit officials are still committed to welcoming those fleeing the war.

Steve Tobocman, the director of Global Detroit, said settling immigrants and refugees in Detroit is essential for economic recovery.

“If Detroit is ever going to stabilize its population loss, frankly, it’s going to have to get serious about being inclusive and being open and welcoming to immigrants,” he said.



Welcoming city

Tobocman said the United States has historically done a great job of accommodating newcomers because of efforts at the local level.

He added that in Detroit, there is a strong network of groups to help immigrants and refugees.

He cited as an example GlobalMatDetroit.org, which connects newcomers to about 700 organizations, including nonprofits and business advocacy groups.

Tobocman highlighted Global Detroit’s emphasis on granting immigrants access to these resources by tackling the linguistic and cultural barriers.

He said municipal initiatives like the mayor’s Immigrant Affairs office and the city council’s Immigration Task Force help make Detroit a destination for those moving to the United States.

“Detroit has unparalleled opportunities for growth and for creating a new home,” Tobocman said. “There is low cost housing; there are low barriers to becoming business owners. The city can become very navigable. It’s also easy to establish a community from people who come from the same country, who speak your language and share your culture and religion.”

He added that the large public school system ensures bilingual programs for students.

Tobocman, a Jewish American, moved to Detroit about 20 years ago. He said he was welcomed despite religious and ethnic differences.

He was elected to the State House of Representatives in 2002. In 2008, he was succeeded by Rashida Tlaib, a Muslim Arab American, who was succeeded last year by Stephanie Chang, an Asian American.

Tobocman said this voting pattern is a testament to Detroiters’ fondness of diversity.



“Not an either-or”

Though he lauded Detroit’s inclusiveness, Tobocman acknowledged that some are skeptical of newcomers and demand greater efforts to help existing residents. But he said programs that assist immigrants are available to everyone.

“This is not an either-or-equation,” he said. “This is an and-equation.”

To illustrate his point, Tobocman cited ProsperUS Detroit, a Global Detroit initiative to train and finance entrepreneurs. He said 85 percent of the program’s graduates are African American Detroiters.

“This isn’t about ‘We’re only funding immigrant businesses or refugee businesses,'” he said. “This is saying that Detroit needs more businesses, more job opportunities, more retail opportunities in its neighborhoods. We want to be a part of working with low income communities of color to help rebuild the city in a way that will be inclusive and equitable.”

The former state representative added that communities’ needs may be different, but addressing the challenges of a certain group does not mean ignoring others’.

He said it is in Detroiters’ self-interest to be welcoming, adding that old and new residents share the same goals and challenges.

At a Nov. 29 town hall meeting on the refugee crisis, Wendell Anthony, the president of Detroit’s NAACP, echoed Tobocman’s remarks.

Anthony said being open to refugees does not mean losing sight of the problems in the neighborhoods. He added that complaining about opportunities for newcomers is divisive.

“There’s enough work in America for everybody to be working and for everybody to have access,” he said.

Anthony said immigrants and refugees bring skills that help the entire community.

At the same meeting, Nabih Ayad, the founder of the Arab American Civil Rights League, said refugees from the Middle East who have settled here are well educated and business oriented.

“Immigrants are what makes this country so strong,” he said. “They’re not a threat to the economy; they boost the economy, especially when you have a community that’s entrepreneurial.”

According to a report by Fiscal Policy Institute, immigrants in the metro Detroit area are twice as likely to own small businesses than U.S.-born residents.

“It’s not like ‘immigrants versus Detroiters’ — it’s ‘immigrants are Detroiters,'” said Councilwoman Raquel Castañeda-López.



Municipal Efforts

Castañeda-López co-founded the Detroit Immigration Task Force with Councilman André Spivey last year. The initiative supports current and incoming immigrant communities and fosters international relations.

Molding Detroit into a global city is at the center of those efforts, Castañeda-López said.

She said being an inclusive city extends beyond economic development. Housing, uniting longtime residents and newcomers, and advocating for immigrants’ rights are also part of the equation.

Detroit officials say services that help newcomers benefit all residents. The city’s municipal ID program, set to take effect next year, is one example. The identification card will assist those who are unable to obtain a state ID, including some in the African American, homeless, senior and immigrant communities.

In October, Mayor Mike Duggan created the office of Immigrant Affairs, which is intended to be a hub connecting newcomers to city resources.

Fayrouz Saad, director of the new department, said her office is working to catalogue resources from the city and from private nonprofit organizations.

Immigrant Affairs collaborates with Motor City Match, which links businesses to funding and real estate opportunities; the Arab American Chamber of Commerce; Detroit Employment Solutions Corporation and ACCESS, among others.

Hachem Ossieran, operations manager for Employment and Training Services in ACCESS’ Detroit office, estimates that refugees and immigrants comprise about 20 percent of his client base.

He said immigrants and refugees do not need assistance indefinitely; they can grow to become job creators.



Anti-immigrant sentiment on the rise

Saad said anti-refugee sentiment, which has become increasingly prevalent over the past few weeks, has not affected her office.

“We are still moving forward in our work as we have been,” she said.

Last week Mayor Duggan reiterated his commitment to resettling 50 refugee families in the city each year for the next three years.

That benchmark is part of an effort to responsibly grow the population, rather than inviting new residents only to build the tax base, Councilwoman Castañeda-López said.

“Although the city could physically absorb thousands of people, in terms of services and infrastructure, we just don’t have the capacity to take that many,” she added.

She cited language services as one area that the city needs to improve.

Castañeda-López said the task force is trying to develop a comprehensive repopulation plan that involves social, cultural, academic and economic components for all Detroiters.

Tobocman said there are many myths about immigration, which Global Detroit tries to dispel.

“The facts are that immigrants are job-makers, not job-takers; that they are a huge benefit to the neighborhoods in the city of Detroit, as well as across the region.”



This piece is part of the series “Detroit Bankruptcy: One Year Later,” presented by the partners of the Detroit Journalism Cooperative.

The DJC journalists continue to explore the impacts of the city’s bankruptcy, including effects on people, neighborhoods and southeast Michigan, and the case’s long-term implications. Their collective work, which is archived at NextChapterDetroit.com, continues to inform regional conversations.

One of these discussions will happen at a free, community event from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 9, at Wayne State University’s Community Arts Auditorium, 450 Reuther Mall. Audiences are invited to attend and ask questions of some of the key figures in the bankruptcy case. Learn more or register.

Funding for this project made possible by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Renaissance Journalism’s Michigan Reporting Initiative and the Ford Foundation.