A year of struggle as an Afghan family builds a new life in California
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[August 11, 2022]
By Brittany Hosea-Small and Kristina Cooke
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Najib
Mohammadi had high hopes for his life in the United States when he, his
pregnant wife Susan and two small children left Afghanistan in July
2021.
But for most of the past year, the family has lived in a
cockroach-infested, one-bedroom apartment in Sacramento unable to find
affordable housing in California's capital. He has struggled to find
work.
The former interpreter for the U.S. military arrived last year under the
Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) program, just two weeks before tens of
thousands of his fellow Afghans were evacuated when Kabul fell to the
Taliban. Mohammadi, 37, feels lucky he is safe and knows he is better
off than others: he speaks English and the SIV program gives his family
a pathway to citizenship. But "it's a really hard life," he said.
Earlier this year, an Afghan evacuee living in Pennsylvania whom
Mohammadi had trained in the Afghan army called and asked him if life
was easier in Sacramento. Mohammadi told him: Don’t come, there's no
housing.
Reuters has followed the Mohammadi family for their first year in the
United States, witnessing their ups and downs as they rebuilt their
lives. (Photo essay: https://reut.rs/3whnabl)
'EDUCATION IS LIKE OXYGEN'
In October, Mohammadi found a job logging the repair needs of damaged
electronics - the pay was regular and he thought he was finally on the
path to stability.
But the company wouldn’t allow him to have a phone on him while he
worked, and he worried about his pregnant wife, Susan, home alone with
their two children, Yasar, 1, and Zahra, 2 at the time. Susan told him
she was worried too. One day in December, he arrived home to find her
passed out on the floor with the children playing around her, he said.
She hadn’t been able to reach him when she started feeling unwell.
He resigned that day.
This spring, Mohammadi enrolled in adult education classes to get his
high school-equivalency diploma. Susan, once she learns English, wants
to study medicine, which would not have been possible in Taliban-ruled
Afghanistan. “Education is like oxygen, like food. It’s necessary for
men and women,” Mohammadi said.
They have discussed enrolling Zahra in preschool, but Susan is worried
her English is not yet strong enough to communicate her needs to
teachers. She has picked up some English from cartoons, and she has
started responding with “OK!” and two thumbs up when her parents speak
to her in Dari, one of the official languages of Afghanistan.
Once his financial situation is more stable, Mohammadi also hopes to be
able to afford therapy to deal with trauma from his army days. He
remembers the cries of women and children when he would enter houses
looking for insurgents and is relieved his kids will have different
lives.
As he walked through a Sacramento park with his family this spring, he
gestured at the quiet green lawn, noting how peaceful it was.
“I was born in war, and lived war,” he said. “The biggest blessing in
life is security.”
BABY '100% AMERICAN'
As Susan's pregnancy progressed, Mohammadi spent hours trying to
navigate U.S. hospital bureaucracy, to ensure that his wife would have a
female doctor when she gave birth, a religious and cultural
non-negotiable for them. “The system is very complicated. I’m not used
to it, and it almost makes me feel dizzy sometimes,” he said at the
time.
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The Mohammadi family, Najib holding Yusuf, Yasar, Susan and Zahra,
sit together in their living room, at their home in Sacramento,
California, U.S., August 1, 2022.
But after Susan's water broke in May, on the day of her scheduled
induction, they arrived at the hospital and learned her doctor was
male. With Susan in labor, they drove 30 minutes to another hospital
with a female doctor on duty.
"I told Najib I will not allow my doctor to be a man even if I die,"
she said. "Najib said that the merciful God will solve our problem.
I got energy from his words."
Their baby, Yusuf, was born healthy and “100% American.” Susan
jokingly calls the baby "Mr. President."
A few weeks after Susan gave birth, Mohammadi helped another family
with a newborn navigate hospital and benefits bureaucracy. In July,
Mohammadi took them shopping and shared his groceries with them.
Throughout the year he was upset and frustrated as he received
pleading calls from former Afghan colleagues who worked for U.S.
forces, he said, asking him to tell U.S. officials they were still
in Afghanistan and stress the need to get them out. Mohammadi didn’t
know how to explain that there was nothing he could do.
Some of his former colleagues in Afghanistan now say they wish they
had not put their lives at risk for U.S. forces, he said.
He is also disappointed, he said, that he has not received more help
in the United States, especially with housing. Mohammadi has been
trying to find an alternative apartment, but most landlords required
more references and income statements than he is able to provide.
Nonprofits that help refugees resettle were overwhelmed by the spike
in Afghan arrivals.
"The evacuation made it significantly more difficult to find housing
– both temporary and permanent – in the Sacramento area," said Kevin
Buffalino, communications director for the Sacramento Food Bank and
Family Services, which provided resettlement services to Mohammadi.
"The influx of people meant that nearly everything was at capacity."
In July, Mohammadi had an emergency appendectomy, which made the
precariousness of his situation hit home even more.
"After my surgery I thought, if I can't work what should I do about
my future, about my kids' future?" he said. "I really extremely felt
like I was homeless here... I don't have a stable situation."
"Every moment," he said, "I face a problem."
The most recent problem: a letter informing the family that their
rent would soon increase by 10%.
Last month, Mohammadi had an interview via Zoom for a job as a
part-time interpreter. He perched on the edge of the bed in their
small sparsely furnished bedroom, as Susan wrangled Zahra, who was
having a tantrum, Yasar and a crying baby Yusuf next door.
He is waiting to hear back.
(Reporting by Brittany Hosea-Small and Kristina Cooke in Sacramento;
Editing by Mary Milliken and Lisa Shumaker)
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