Why Is Texas Muslim Teen Ahmed Moving to Qatar? 
By Riaz Haq
CA

 

Fourteen-year-old American Muslim kid Ahmed Mohamed is moving to Qatar with his family. His attempt to impress his teacher with a homemade clock put him in jail in handcuffs when his teacher at his school in Irving, Texas, thought it was a bomb and called the police.

 

The story made headlines in Western and international media and brought widespread condemnation of the  anti-Muslim bigotry in his hometown.  There was also an outpouring of support for him from  Silicon Valley tech titans who invited Ahmed to their campuses. President Obama tweeted his support for Ahmed and invited him to the White House.
The  Dallas Morning News has reported that top schools from across the United States had tried to woo Mohamed, but it was the Qatari offer “that most intrigued the family.” The newspaper reported that Mohamed will study at the Doha Academy while his siblings find schools in Doha, the Qatari capital.
The news has intrigued me as well. I have friends and relatives from Pakistan who have been living and working in Qatar and other oil-rich Arab nations for several years. Although they are well educated and probably financially better off than they would be in Pakistan, they resent the fact that they are paid less than their white colleagues doing same or similar work. In the event that they lose their jobs, they would have to pack up and leave Qatar at very short notice. Even their Qatari-born children have no rights there; they would have to leave with them. If Ahmed and his family think they are escaping  racism in America, they will find much more of it in their new home in Qatar, with no bill of rights or  civil rights groups or independent courts to protect them.
There are several questions that I suggest Ahmed's father to ponder as he prepares to move to Qatar along with Ahmed and the rest of the family:
1. When was the last time Qatar's Emir spoke out against wrongs done to the children of foreign-born residents of his country as the President of the United States did for Ahmad?
2. The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) spoke out for Ahmed when he was subjected to abuse in Texas. Are there any civil rights organizations like CAIR in Qatar?
3. What chance does Ahmed have of realizing his full potential in Qatar as  Pakistan-born Shahid Khan, India-born Vinod Khosla and many  immigrants or children of immigrants have in the United States?
Even if Ahmed's father persists in his folly, he can have some comfort in the fact that the United States will still go to bat for him and his family because they carry US passports. And they can return to the United States as American citizens when Qatar decides to expel them.

 

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