"My dad was fighting, he shot with guns." Earnestness washed over his face, leapt into his words. "He had to fight, they made him, they would have killed him if he didn't." A child's innocence stolen from the cradle. "My grandmother, she spoke Arabic, like all of us." I complimented his English, his sweet eyes shone, emitting radiant childlike innocence. He continued on, his arms stretched out wide in passionate emphasis, "We had nooooo electricity, none! No power, no refrigerator, nothing! No phones or cars." The filtered water fountain across from us made a humming noise. I forgot to thank the gas station attendant. I don't think I kissed my husband goodbye this morning. We threw away the left-over hummus yesterday. A throng of young students shuffled down the hallway, quiet so as not to cause disturbance, each one different from the other, freedom taking up rear guard. This young little man, he lived and breathed the foreign air of injustice, hatred and war. He made it to America and I was glad.
"Do you like America?" I asked him as he stood up from the tiny metal chair. "Oh yes! My dad has a cell phone now and he talks on it." The exuberant smile pasted on his face righted all the wrongs, all the evils, if only for those transient moments shared. My heart, it sang right happy.
My fellow Americans, we are and always will be a nation of immigrants.
We were strangers once too.
~Barack Obama~