Somali Diaspora, A Journey Away Book Signing Event
Columbus, Ohio (Bartamaha) — Abdi Roble and company were at the Columbus Museum of Art signing their new book. Scores of people came to support Abdi, Doug and Tarik for their effort of documenting the Somali diapora.
After five years of documenting Somali Diaspora, the Somali Documentary Project has just released its first book, The Somali Diaspora: A Journey Away. This book is unique in its comprehensive examination of the Somali Diaspora in America. This is a story of an optimistic people as they struggle through the desperate challenges of fleeing a civil war and as they find that they must face different challenges in America. Photographer Abdi Roble and writer Doug Rutledge begin their journey in Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya, where over 150,000 Somali people have come to escape the violence. While in Dadaab, Roble and Rutledge met the family of Abdi Salaam, who was later resettled in Anaheim, California. They documented the troubles and the triumphs of the family in Anaheim and then followed them when they moved to Portland, ME. They also document the lives of Somali people in Columbus, Ohio, which is the second largest Somali community in the United States, and in Minneapolis, which has the largest Somali Community. So the story develops from the refugee camp, where people struggle just to eat, to Minneapolis, where Somali doctors and dentists make life for everyone even better in one of America's more sophisticated urban settings.
The Somali Diaspora: A Journey Away offers the intimate opportunity to introduce yourselves to your Somali neighbors across the country. This book includes the work that was recently displayed in the Columbus Museum of Art. The faces in these photographs tell their own stories of optimism confronting perhaps the most horrible conditions with which human beings ever have to cope, while documenting the many successes that Somali people have achieved in America. The essays weave these stories together to tell the tale of a people who have moved to a new land, while maintaining their unique and meaningful way of life.
Dua from Makka Al Mukaramah
Shiikh Sudais Watch- Daawo
Muxaadaro ka hadlaysa RAMADAANKA
Shiikh Aadan Daawo - Watch
Somalian family finds hope,
peace in Lansing
Her 11 children, two sons-in-law, and three grandchildren gather between 10 and 11 a.m. in her five-bedroom Lansing home. The women of the family cook stuffed turkey, fried rice, vegetables, bread, salad and Somali hot sauce.
Somalia’s runners provide inspiration
Samia Yusuf Omar headed back to Somalia Sunday, returning to the small two-room house in Mogadishu shared by seven family members. Her mother lives there, selling fruits and vegetables. Her father is buried there,
Ahmed Ould Abdallah Speaks to Somalis in Minneapolis + Reactions Watch
Nomad Boy
A Short Somali Film about the life of a young Somali Nomad boy in the 1960's