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VOL. 18 ISSUE VI<br />

METRO DETROIT CHALDEAN COMMUNITY <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong><br />

$<br />

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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 3


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CONTENTS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong><br />

THE CHALDEAN NEWS VOLUME 18 ISSUE VI<br />

departments<br />

6 FROM THE EDITOR<br />

BY PAUL JONNA<br />

“We’re baaack!”<br />

7 GUEST COLUMN<br />

BY VENAR AYAR<br />

The COVID Relief for Employers<br />

that You May Not Know About<br />

22<br />

8 FOUNDATION UPDATE<br />

10 NOTEWORTHY<br />

11 CHALDEAN DIGEST<br />

12 IRAQ TODAY<br />

BY DOREEN ABI RAAD, CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE<br />

Chesterton High School opens in Iraq,<br />

with an emphasis on classical education<br />

14 FAMILY TIME<br />

BY DANIELLE ALEXANDER<br />

5 Family Summer Vacation Ideas<br />

on the cover<br />

22 RECOVERING FROM COVID:<br />

BUSINESSES ADAPT<br />

BY PAUL NATINSKY<br />

features<br />

24 THE ART SPREAD:<br />

HEALING THROUGH ART<br />

BY LISA CIPRIANO<br />

26 ‘SHEIKH TANK’ NIGHT TO<br />

KICK OFF FALL INVESTING<br />

FOR ARK ANGEL FUND<br />

BY PAUL NATINSKY<br />

28 BRIGHT BEGINNINGS<br />

BY SARAH KITTLE<br />

30 SHENANDOAH GOES PRIVATE<br />

BY SARAH KITTLE<br />

16 RELIGION<br />

Bishop’s Special<br />

Appointments Announced<br />

18 IN MEMORIAM<br />

20 COMMUNITY PROFILE<br />

Haithem Sarafa: A Profile of Giving<br />

32 CULTURE & HISTORY<br />

The Jewish Community of Iraq –<br />

History and Influence<br />

BY ADHID MIRI, PHD<br />

36 SPORTS<br />

BY STEVE STEIN<br />

Sacred Heart Doubles Duos<br />

Pump Out Victories<br />

38 DOCTOR IS IN<br />

DR. JUSTIN KAMMO AND SHAYOTA<br />

The Importance of<br />

Orthodontics and Dentistry<br />

40 CLASSIFIED<br />

42 EVENTS<br />

18th Annual Golf Outing<br />

Scotch & Cigars PAC Event<br />

<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 5


from the EDITOR<br />

PUBLISHED BY<br />

Chaldean News, LLC<br />

Chaldean Community Foundation<br />

Martin Manna<br />

EDITORIAL<br />

ACTING EDITOR IN CHIEF<br />

Paul Jonna<br />

MANAGING EDITOR<br />

Sarah Kittle<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Danielle Alexander<br />

Venar Ayar<br />

Lisa Cipriano<br />

Dr. Justin Kammo<br />

Sarah Kittle<br />

M. Lapham<br />

Adhid Miri, PhD<br />

Paul Natinsky<br />

Dr. Jomana Shayota<br />

Steve Stein<br />

ART & PRODUCTION<br />

CREATIVE DIRECTOR<br />

Alex Lumelsky with SKY Creative<br />

GRAPHIC DESIGNER<br />

Zina Lumelsky with SKY Creative<br />

PHOTOGRAPHERS<br />

Dany Ashaka<br />

Beth Singer<br />

Sue Spangler<br />

SALES<br />

Interlink Media<br />

Sana Navarrette<br />

SUBSCRIPTIONS: $35 PER YEAR<br />

CONTACT INFORMATION<br />

Story ideas: edit@chaldeannews.com<br />

Advertisements: ads@chaldeannews.com<br />

Subscription and all other inquiries:<br />

info@chaldeannews.com<br />

Chaldean News<br />

30095 Northwestern Hwy, Suite 101<br />

Farmington Hills, MI 48334<br />

www.chaldeannews.com<br />

Phone: (248) 851-8600<br />

Publication: The Chaldean News (P-6); Published<br />

monthly; Issue Date: July <strong>2021</strong><br />

Subscriptions:<br />

12 months, $35.<br />

Publication Address:<br />

30095 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 101,<br />

Farmington Hills, MI 48334;<br />

Permit to mail at periodicals postage rates<br />

is on file at Farmington Hills Post Office<br />

Postmaster: Send address changes to<br />

“The Chaldean News 30095 Northwestern Hwy.,<br />

Suite 101, Farmington Hills, MI 48334”<br />

“We’re baaack!”<br />

We are halfway<br />

through the year<br />

and now that everything<br />

is opening back up,<br />

we are hitting the ground<br />

running. The Chaldean<br />

American Chamber and<br />

the Chaldean Community<br />

Foundation are again hosting<br />

in-person events, and it<br />

seems like everybody wants<br />

to get out of the house.<br />

The recent golf outing<br />

and PAC fundraiser photos featured<br />

in our Events section tell the story.<br />

Masks have been put away, handshakes<br />

are back, and people are relieved<br />

to see familiar faces once<br />

again. It is almost scary how quickly<br />

things are feeling like ‘normal.’<br />

As with anything, the only way out<br />

is through. We have come through this<br />

extremely difficult period, which has<br />

impacted our businesses. Paul Natinsky<br />

interviewed a few business owners and<br />

got some input from elected officials<br />

who wanted to talk about what has<br />

been referred to as the current “labor<br />

shortage.” Everyone has an opinion on<br />

the unemployment subsidies and the<br />

effect they have on hiring practices.<br />

We cover the difficulties of the hiring<br />

and interview process.<br />

Gearing up for interviews of their<br />

own is the Ark Angel Fund (AAF),<br />

which is hosting a Shark Tank-like<br />

event called “Sheikh Tank” this September.<br />

Based on the premise that the<br />

Chaldean community is full of good<br />

ideas, the Fund investors are looking<br />

for the next big thing in business. Note<br />

that while the AAF normally hears<br />

pitches from anyone who piques their<br />

interest, this particular opportunity is<br />

PAUL JONNA<br />

ACTING EDITOR<br />

IN CHIEF<br />

for the Chaldean community<br />

only. Hopefully, they will discover<br />

some top-notch talent!<br />

“Top-notch talent”<br />

is what I would call the<br />

Scared Heart Tennis Team<br />

and their unbelievably good<br />

pairs, sisters Marisa and<br />

Kayla Nafso and friends<br />

Angelina Kakos and Noor<br />

Simon. These girls have<br />

played their hearts out and<br />

it shows! Coached by Chris<br />

Shaya, this team has plenty to feel<br />

good about.<br />

Another pair that is touching<br />

hearts is Rawan Ita-Diaz and Nadin<br />

Said, two Chaldean women who<br />

started The Art Spread, an organization<br />

that promotes healing through<br />

art. Reaching cross-country (Rawan<br />

is here in Michigan while Nadin is<br />

on the west coast), the non-profit<br />

is growing in leaps and bounds.<br />

Rawan’s inspiration for the organization<br />

was a life-changing injury. The<br />

only way out is through…<br />

Addressing a real need in the<br />

community, the Chaldean Community<br />

Foundation has developed an<br />

early childhood education (ECE)<br />

program called Bright Beginnings.<br />

Sarah Kittle writes about the importance<br />

of ECE and how the CCF<br />

is identifying and targeting specific<br />

skills, working with the whole family<br />

to benefit not only the children but<br />

the entire community.<br />

In Family Time, we bring you 5<br />

exciting summer vacation ideas. After<br />

reading Danielle Alexander’s article,<br />

I’m trying to decide where to<br />

take the kids this summer. There are<br />

many great choices but the ones in<br />

this column really stand out.<br />

We began profiling community<br />

members this month, starting with Haithem<br />

Sarafa. Haithem has always had a<br />

heart for the community and gives back<br />

whenever and however he can. It was<br />

a pleasure to profile him; look for more<br />

profiles in upcoming issues.<br />

Dr. Miri is always entertaining<br />

with his colorful stories of the past,<br />

The Chaldean American Chamber and the<br />

Chaldean Community Foundation are again<br />

hosting in-person events, and it seems like<br />

everybody wants to get out of the house.<br />

and his “part II” of the story of the<br />

Jewish community in Iraq is no exception.<br />

His stories are hard to compress<br />

for print; there’s so much content that<br />

we have decided to place the more extended<br />

version on our website. Enjoy!<br />

We also cover Shenandoah<br />

Country Club’s move to become a<br />

private golf club. Struggling through<br />

the COVID crisis, Shenandoah has<br />

come out on the other side prepared<br />

to be more profitable than ever.<br />

Such is life.<br />

With gratitude,<br />

Paul Jonna<br />

Acting Editor in Chief<br />

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6 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


GUEST column<br />

The COVID Relief for Employers<br />

that You May Not Know About<br />

By now, just about<br />

everyone has heard<br />

of PPP loans, EIDL<br />

Loans, and the various<br />

grants available to employers<br />

that have been negatively<br />

impacted by COVID-19.<br />

However, there is another<br />

COVID relief program that<br />

many people don’t know<br />

about called the Employee<br />

Retention Tax Credit<br />

(ERC). It’s largely unknown<br />

because when it was first rolled out it<br />

didn’t apply to a lot of people (you<br />

couldn’t claim the credit if you got a<br />

PPP loan), but the rules have since<br />

changed. Under the new ERC rules,<br />

many businesses that were impacted<br />

by COVID are entitled to tens, or<br />

even hundreds of thousands of dollars<br />

in COVID relief funds – over<br />

and above any PPP or EIDL loans<br />

they might have already received.<br />

VENAR AYAR<br />

SPECIAL TO THE<br />

CHALDEAN NEWS<br />

Who qualifies for the<br />

credit?<br />

Any employer that meets<br />

any one of the following<br />

three conditions is a potential<br />

candidate for the ERC:<br />

The business was fully<br />

or partially suspended due<br />

to a government order, and<br />

it had more than a nominal<br />

impact on the business.<br />

The business experienced<br />

a significant decline<br />

in gross receipts for any one quarter<br />

in 2020 or <strong>2021</strong>, compared with the<br />

same quarter in 2019. The definition<br />

of “significant decline” varies<br />

depending on whether the quarter<br />

pandemic (that’s a partial suspension).<br />

Since the restaurants meet the<br />

first test, it wouldn’t even matter if<br />

they made twice as much money during<br />

COVID as ever before – they still<br />

qualify for the credit.<br />

How is the amount of the credit<br />

calculated?<br />

The amount of the credit is calculated<br />

based on a certain percentage<br />

of qualified wages the business paid.<br />

The exact percentage depends on<br />

the year in which the quarter you are<br />

claiming the ERC for falls in. For<br />

quarters in the calendar year 2020,<br />

the credit would be 50% of the qualified.<br />

For quarters in the <strong>2021</strong> calen-<br />

you can claim per employee is $5,000<br />

for 2020 (50% of $10,000), and<br />

$28,000 for <strong>2021</strong> (70% of $40,000).<br />

So, what’s the catch?<br />

The only catch is that you cannot<br />

claim the ERC for wages that were<br />

paid using money the business got<br />

from the PPP program. So, this is<br />

where it starts to get complicated:<br />

to do it right (and get the maximum<br />

amount possible), you would have to<br />

analyze all the payroll records for the<br />

relevant quarters’ week-by-week and<br />

employee-by-employee and allocate<br />

the wages between the PPP program<br />

and the ERC program. The goal is<br />

to try and make sure you are getting<br />

100% of your PPP loan forgiven,<br />

while also getting the biggest ERC<br />

credit possible. Because the definition<br />

of “qualified wages” is different<br />

depending on if you are talking about<br />

“The ERC is what’s known as a refundable tax credit that is available<br />

to employers and applied against your payroll (not income) taxes.<br />

The maximum amount you can get is $33,000 per employee.”<br />

So how does it work?<br />

The ERC is what’s known as a refundable<br />

tax credit that is available<br />

to employers and applied against<br />

your payroll (not income) taxes.<br />

The maximum amount you can get<br />

is $33,000 per employee. What we<br />

mean when we say the credit is refundable<br />

is that the IRS will cut you<br />

a check for the full amount of the<br />

tax credit - even if the amount of the<br />

credit is more than the payroll taxes<br />

you paid. It’s very similar to a grant<br />

in this way. A non-refundable credit<br />

would wipe your tax bill out and carry<br />

forward, but refundable means you<br />

still get money back.<br />

you are looking at is in 2020 or <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

To qualify for 2020, your sales would<br />

have had to go down by more than<br />

50%. For <strong>2021</strong>, they would have had<br />

to go down by more than 20% (compared<br />

to the same quarter in 2019).<br />

The business was started after<br />

February 1, 2020, and it has annual<br />

revenue of less than $1 million.<br />

Remember – the business only has<br />

to qualify for any one of the three tests<br />

to qualify for the credit. For example,<br />

just about every sit-down restaurant<br />

would qualify for the credit under the<br />

first test due to the fact that their indoor<br />

dining capacity was limited by<br />

a government order throughout the<br />

dar year, the amount of the credit is<br />

70% of the qualified wages.<br />

For most employers, qualified<br />

wages include wages paid to employees<br />

other than the owners of<br />

the business and their relatives – up<br />

to a certain maximum amount per<br />

employee. The maximum amount<br />

of qualified wages you can claim per<br />

employee depends on – you guessed it<br />

– which year we are dealing with. For<br />

2020 credits, the maximum qualified<br />

wages are $10,000 per employee (total<br />

for the year). For <strong>2021</strong>, the maximum<br />

qualified wages are $10,000 per<br />

employee, per quarter ($40,000 for<br />

the year). So, the maximum credit<br />

PPP forgiveness or ERC claims, doing<br />

the allocations could get pretty<br />

involved.<br />

This is a huge opportunity for<br />

businesses to take the negative impact<br />

of the pandemic and turn it into<br />

a positive. If anyone has any specific<br />

questions about how this works, you<br />

are welcome to call my office at 248-<br />

691-5555, and I would be happy to<br />

spend some time answering your<br />

questions free of charge.<br />

Venar Ayar is the Principal Attorney<br />

at Ayar Law, a Farmington Hills based<br />

law firm specializing in Tax Law for<br />

individuals and businesses.<br />

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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 7


FOUNDATION update<br />

Ralph C. Wilson, Jr.<br />

Legacy Fund<br />

The Chaldean Community Foundation<br />

is proud to announce a recent<br />

grant from the Ralph C. Wilson, Jr.<br />

Legacy Funds administered by the<br />

Community Foundation for Southeast<br />

Michigan.<br />

The grant will go towards funding<br />

a sports sampling camp for immigrant<br />

youth at the Chaldean Community<br />

Foundation. Stay tuned for more information<br />

regarding the camps soon.<br />

Parlor Event<br />

It has been almost a year since the CCF revealed the newly expanded center. With the lifting of pandemic restrictions,<br />

the Foundation was pleased to hold a small-scale parlor event on the evening of June 2. Business leaders and community<br />

members enjoyed refreshments and hours d’ oeuvres after a tour of the building – learning more about current programs,<br />

services and future plans. To cap off the event, a presentation and short video allowed attendees an inside peek of how<br />

programs continued throughout the pandemic. If you would like to contribute to the CCF, visit www.chaldeanfoundation.<br />

org to learn more about the ways you can help.<br />

<strong>2021</strong> Academic<br />

Scholarship Program<br />

Launching Soon<br />

Through support from w3r Consulting,<br />

Yvonne Nona Memorial Scholarship<br />

Fund, Drs. Nathima and Peter<br />

Atchoo Family Foundation Scholarship<br />

Fund, and the Abdulkarim and<br />

Jamila Sesi Memorial Scholarship<br />

Fund, the CCF will award more than<br />

$60,000 in scholarships this year.<br />

Students can apply online beginning<br />

Monday, July 12, <strong>2021</strong>. For more information,<br />

please visit our website at<br />

www.chaldeanfoundation.org.<br />

Save the Dates<br />

November 11, <strong>2021</strong><br />

The Chaldean Community Foundation<br />

is excited to announce its 3rd<br />

Annual Awards Gala! This will be<br />

the premiere annual event to celebrate<br />

the success of a healthy and vibrant<br />

Chaldean community here in<br />

Southeast Michigan. The event will<br />

take place at the Palazzo Grande at<br />

54660 Van Dyke Avenue in Shelby<br />

Township.<br />

For sponsorship information, call<br />

586.722.7253 or visit www.chaldeanfoundation.org.<br />

Southeastern Michigan Association Chiefs of Police Visit CCF<br />

On June 3rd, the CCF hosted the Southeastern Michigan Association Chiefs of Police (SEMACP) at their facility for a<br />

luncheon. 45 police chiefs visited the facility and learned more about CCF’s service offerings and ways the Foundation<br />

helps the community.<br />

August 1, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Make a difference and help our displaced<br />

brothers and sisters obtain<br />

much needed medications. The<br />

CCF’s Project Bismutha program will<br />

be holding a Walk-A-Thon to help<br />

fundraise and provide the necessary<br />

medications for families in need.<br />

The event will take place at<br />

Camp Chaldean, 1391 Kellogg Road<br />

in Brighton. It includes a Mass with<br />

Fr. Rodney at 12:30 PM followed<br />

by a family picnic. To register, visit<br />

https://caahp-usa.org/events/<strong>2021</strong>-<br />

walk-a-thon/.<br />

8 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


THERE IS A TREATMENT<br />

FOR COVID-19<br />

AND IT’S AVAILABLE<br />

IN DETROIT.<br />

If you recently tested positive, call now to see if you’re<br />

eligible. The one-time treatment can prevent symptoms<br />

from getting worse and keep you out of the hospital.<br />

CALL FOR AN<br />

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6/4/21 5:28 PM<br />

<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 9


noteworthy<br />

Local Designer Awarded<br />

PHOTO BY BETH SINGER<br />

Hour Media’s Detroit Design<br />

magazine is a regional upscale<br />

home magazine showcasing<br />

the luxe metropolitan Detroit<br />

market. For nearly 20 years, the<br />

magazine has linked readers to the<br />

state’s leading designers, builders,<br />

architects, home-accessory manufacturers,<br />

and more. With captivating<br />

photography, fascinating stories, and<br />

updates on must-attend design-industry<br />

events, they inspire readers to<br />

fashion their homes with the best in<br />

luxurious design and fine furnishings.<br />

Each year, the magazine hosts a<br />

Detroit Design Awards ceremony,<br />

honoring architecture firms and<br />

consulting companies in categories<br />

such as custom designed millwork,<br />

stairs and railing, decorative glass<br />

and mirror, flooring and rugs, interior<br />

use of stone and tile, lighting,<br />

and more.<br />

Sandra Lousia is a designer with<br />

her own company, SLS Designs,<br />

Inc. The company has been in existence<br />

for 8 years but she has been<br />

in the business for 15. She keeps<br />

busy within her own community,<br />

gaining clients by word-of-mouth.<br />

While working on a photo shoot<br />

in a house she designed with C-arc<br />

Design, a high-end luxury residential<br />

and commercial architectural<br />

design firm in Bloomfield Hills, the<br />

photographer was so impressed she<br />

nudged Sandra to submit the design<br />

for the Detroit Design Awards. Sandra<br />

submitted that design and a few<br />

others, and C-arc Design placed in<br />

the top three 6 times, including a<br />

first-place award for her bar design.<br />

We caught up with Sandra at<br />

home and talked by phone. “It’s<br />

such a blessing to be recognized in<br />

this way,” Lousia shared. “It’s a lot<br />

of hard work – some of these designs<br />

take years.”<br />

Above, from left: Vino Lousia, Sandra Lousia, Alexis Wright, Terry George and Calvin George.<br />

Top of page: The winning design.<br />

10 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


chaldean DIGEST<br />

What others are saying about Chaldeans<br />

Iraq’s Upcoming Election Likely to Disenfranchise Indigenous Assyrians<br />

The Assyrian flag flutters over the town of Alqosh, 45 kilometers<br />

north of Mosul, on September 19, 2014.<br />

Recently, Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission<br />

(IHEC) canceled election participation for citizens<br />

abroad, disenfranchising nearly 1 million Iraqi citizens in<br />

advance of early parliamentary elections set for October.<br />

In a public statement, IHEC announced that the ruling<br />

comes as a result of “several technical and financial, legal,<br />

and health obstacles” that could prevent applicants abroad<br />

from receiving their biometric voting cards by Election Day.<br />

Bishop Yaldo: Post pandemic and war, our Church<br />

is revitalized by Pope and youth<br />

CHALDEAN CHURCH<br />

MOHAMMED SAWAF/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES<br />

The commission’s decision was met with mixed reactions,<br />

with many Iraqis in support. They argue that<br />

citizens in diaspora should not be making decisions for a<br />

country they do not reside in—a belief popularized since<br />

2003 due to the corruption and failures of expatriates,<br />

who played a dominant role for Iraqis in the U.S.-led<br />

invasion and subsequent formation of the current government<br />

and constitution.<br />

Although this stance has some validity, it fails to consider<br />

the negative effects the decision will have on Iraqis<br />

living outside the country, particularly on Indigenous minority<br />

groups such as the Assyrians. Ethnic Assyrians comprise<br />

the majority of Iraq’s Christians, with many identifying with<br />

their church classifications, such as Chaldean or Syriac.<br />

With competition and deliberate interference from<br />

external parties amid ongoing population drain, Assyrians<br />

have struggled to secure legitimate representation. The results<br />

of the 2018 Iraqi parliamentary elections suggest that<br />

Assyrians have been effectively excluded from the political<br />

process. Only one allocated seat—held by the Assyrian<br />

Democratic Movement—was earned through grassroots<br />

mobilization, without endorsement or funding from<br />

ruling parties.<br />

– Neil Joseph Nakkash, Newsweek<br />

Baghdad celebrated the first communions of 210 boys and girls this month.<br />

After the dark years of sectarian violence<br />

and the still ongoing but “improving”<br />

situation in the Covid-19<br />

pandemic, the Iraqi Church, “wants<br />

to start again with young people and<br />

Pope Francis’ visit, a moment of celebration<br />

that continues to bear fruit.”<br />

Monsignor Basilio Yaldo, auxiliary<br />

of Baghdad and close collaborator<br />

of the Chaldean Patriarch Cardinal<br />

Louis Raphael Sako spoke to AsiaNews<br />

about the atmosphere of celebration<br />

for First Communions celebrated<br />

with over 200 young people from<br />

the diocese.<br />

“We are optimistic, especially in<br />

Baghdad,” says Yaldo, “the heart of<br />

the country from which to build the<br />

future.”<br />

On June 6, Yaldo presided over a<br />

Mass in the capital with 210 boys and<br />

girls who celebrated their First Communion.<br />

A moment of celebration,<br />

with the church full of family members<br />

and faithful while respecting - the<br />

patriarchate is keen to specify - all the<br />

safety rules to prevent coronavirus outbreaks.<br />

“The situation has improved a<br />

lot, especially in Baghdad,” confirms<br />

the prelate, but “attention must remain<br />

high, while the vaccination campaign<br />

that we strongly support continues<br />

throughout the country.”<br />

Many activities have restarted<br />

such as catechism, youth meetings,<br />

and masses, designed to give hope<br />

after past sufferings. “We are working<br />

on a general gathering of young<br />

people scheduled for next month,”<br />

says Yaldo, “a moment of prayer,<br />

celebration and reflection on the<br />

Pope’s visit, this will be the theme<br />

on which we focus…an extraordinary<br />

event that we must keep alive<br />

and whose teachings we must put<br />

into practice, renewing the message<br />

of hope for Christians in Iraq and<br />

throughout the Middle East.”<br />

– Asia News<br />

The church at Camp Chaldean in Genoa<br />

Township, shown April 29, <strong>2021</strong>.<br />

Proposed Chaldean<br />

church retreat<br />

center hits another<br />

roadblock with<br />

Genoa Township<br />

Southfield-based Chaldean Catholic<br />

Church of the U.S.A. is proposing<br />

a more than 28,000-square-foot retreat<br />

center and two-story dormitory<br />

with 40-bedroom units for up to 80<br />

people next to St. George Shrine at<br />

Our Lady of the Fields Camp on Kellogg<br />

Road. It is often called “Camp<br />

Chaldean.”<br />

An existing campground on the<br />

property features cabins, a banquet<br />

hall, a high ropes course, a beach and a<br />

shrine for prayer and mass. The church<br />

The Chaldean Church<br />

hopes to build a new retreat<br />

center and dormitory but<br />

has run into roadblocks.<br />

operates a youth camp there. Families<br />

and groups also rent cabins and the<br />

banquet center for private events.<br />

The Chaldean Church hopes to<br />

build a new retreat center and dormitory<br />

but has run into roadblocks<br />

put up by the Genoa Township<br />

Planning Commission amid neighbors’<br />

concerns about traffic, noise,<br />

lights, and a purportedly adverse effect<br />

on home property values.<br />

The Commission is giving the<br />

Church time to address those concerns<br />

and submit a revised plan; a<br />

public hearing will be rescheduled at<br />

a later date.<br />

– Jennifer Timar, Livingston Daily<br />

GILLIS BENEDICT/LIVINGSTON DAILY<br />

<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 11


IRAQ today<br />

Chesterton High School opens in Iraq,<br />

with an emphasis on classical education<br />

BY DOREEN ABI RAAD, CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE<br />

Catholic education is taking<br />

another step forward in Irbil<br />

in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, affirming<br />

the country’s historical leadership<br />

role in academia.<br />

In the fall, Mar Qardakh School,<br />

a kindergarten through ninth grade<br />

Catholic institution, will open a<br />

high school, the Chesterton Academy<br />

of St. Thomas the Apostle, in<br />

the northern Iraq city.<br />

Named for G.K. Chesterton, the<br />

renowned early 20th century English<br />

writer, philosopher and lay theologian<br />

who became Catholic, Chesterton<br />

schools employ the classical approach<br />

to education, emphasizing history,<br />

language studies and literature.<br />

The academy is one of several initiatives<br />

established under Chaldean<br />

Archbishop Bashar Warda of Irbil to<br />

help Christians remain in Iraq. The<br />

Christian presence dates to apostolic<br />

times. In 2003, there were 1.5 million<br />

Christians in Iraq, but today<br />

observers estimate about 250,000<br />

remain.<br />

In summer 2014, more than<br />

120,000 Iraqi Christians were uprooted<br />

from their homes in Mosul<br />

and the Ninevah Plain by Islamic<br />

State militants and sought refuge<br />

in the Irbil Archdiocese. The archdiocese<br />

coordinated emergency aid,<br />

housing, education, and pastoral care<br />

for the displaced families.<br />

Aside from Mar Qardakh School,<br />

which is internationally accredited,<br />

Archbishop Warda has established<br />

three other schools. In 2015, he<br />

founded the Catholic University of<br />

Erbil. He most recently established<br />

Maryamana Hospital, also in Irbil.<br />

The institutions serve people of all<br />

faith traditions and cultures.<br />

“Education is the key to building<br />

bridges of peace, reconciliation and<br />

coexistence, especially in the Middle<br />

East,” Archbishop Warda told Catholic<br />

News Service.<br />

In developing the academy,<br />

Archbishop Warda invited a delegation<br />

from the U.S.-based Society of<br />

Gilbert Keith Chesterton to Irbil to<br />

see the education work already underway.<br />

The society’s mission is to<br />

promote Catholic education, evangelization,<br />

and the church’s social<br />

In September <strong>2021</strong>, the Archdiocese of Irbil and the U.S.-based Chesterton Schools<br />

Network will launch St. Thomas Chesterton Academy, a classical Christian secondary<br />

education track for students at Mar Qardakh School in Irbil, Iraq.<br />

teaching.<br />

The visit originally was scheduled<br />

for February 2020 but was postponed<br />

to coincide with Pope Francis’ pastoral<br />

visit to Iraq this past March.<br />

Andrew Youngblood, director<br />

of curriculum for the Chesterton<br />

Schools Network, said Archbishop<br />

Warda welcomed the society’s team<br />

to Iraq three days before the pope’s<br />

March 5 arrival.<br />

“Over the next few days, we were<br />

able to tour schools, the hospital, and<br />

the university that the archbishop<br />

has created,” Youngblood told CNS.<br />

“We heard the stories about the internally<br />

displaced people that arrived<br />

in Irbil in 2014, whom he helped organize<br />

into camps and then quickly<br />

moved into housing so that they had<br />

greater safety and dignity.<br />

“We saw the sustainable world<br />

that he is creating to provide these<br />

people health care, education and<br />

jobs. He truly is a shepherd who cares<br />

for his flock,” Youngblood added.<br />

To the delegation’s surprise, Kurdish<br />

officials approved the Chesterton<br />

Academy within 24 hours.<br />

“Much of the goodwill we experienced<br />

is attributable to the respect<br />

people have for the archbishop and<br />

to the excitement people had because<br />

of the papal visit,” Youngblood<br />

said.<br />

But Youngblood also felt there<br />

was “an overwhelming amount of<br />

grace involved” leading to the academy’s<br />

development, the network’s first<br />

in the Middle East.<br />

The first Chesterton Academy<br />

opened in 2007 in the Twin Cities<br />

area of Minnesota. The network now<br />

has 30 schools. Officials are aiming<br />

for 150 schools within a decade.<br />

“My vision is to create an environment<br />

where students are empowered<br />

to acquire and value knowledge<br />

and skills to support them through<br />

different aspects of their lives,” said<br />

Hala Warda, headmistress of Mar<br />

Qardakh School. She is not related<br />

to the archbishop.<br />

“My hope is to raise students who<br />

are lifelong learners, who can contribute<br />

to their local as well as global<br />

communities,” Hala Warda said.<br />

There is a strong U.S. connection<br />

as well among the archbishop, Hala<br />

Warda and a Franciscan-run university<br />

in Ohio.<br />

On May 15, Hala Warda received<br />

two master’s degrees from the Franciscan<br />

University of Steubenville,<br />

CNS PHOTO/COURTESY ARCHDIOCESE OF IRBIL<br />

one in business administration and<br />

another in science in education administration.<br />

Archbishop Warda was on campus<br />

the same day to receive an honorary<br />

doctorate degree for his advocacy<br />

and outstanding service to Iraqis<br />

suffering from persecution, terrorism<br />

and unrest during the country’s recent<br />

tumultuous past.<br />

For the archbishop, the bond with<br />

the university had been established<br />

earlier. In 2019, for example, he and<br />

the university’s president, Franciscan<br />

Father David Pivonka, signed a<br />

memorandum of understanding that<br />

includes cultural exchanges and the<br />

development of programs between<br />

the Catholic University of Erbil and<br />

Franciscan University of Steubenville.<br />

That bond was strengthened<br />

when Father Pivonka led a university<br />

delegation to Irbil, joining the Chesterton<br />

society team.<br />

“The archbishop realizes the importance<br />

of making progress in education,”<br />

Hala Warda said. “Thanks<br />

to his efforts, Christian families have<br />

greater hope for a bright future for<br />

their children.”<br />

Further, she said, the pope’s visit<br />

“brought so much attention to our<br />

Christian communities in Iraq.”<br />

“It was very emotional for our<br />

people to realize that they are not<br />

forgotten by their Christian brothers<br />

and sisters,” Hala Warda told CNS.<br />

“Chesterton Academy’s collaboration<br />

with Mar Qardakh School will<br />

serve as another example that we are<br />

not forgotten, and there are efforts to<br />

help us get back on our feet and become<br />

an integral part of our society<br />

once again.”<br />

Most Mar Qardakh students<br />

come from low-income households<br />

and many of them attend school<br />

tuition-free.<br />

“We greatly depend on contributions<br />

from generous individuals and<br />

organizations to maintain our educational<br />

work,” she said.<br />

Editor’s Note: Information about<br />

donating to Mar Qardakh School<br />

through St. Thomas Mission is online<br />

at stmiraq.org.<br />

12 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 13


FAMILY time<br />

5 Family Summer Vacation Ideas<br />

BY DANIELLE ALEXANDER<br />

Even though Michigan summers are what<br />

we Michiganders live for, taking a family<br />

trip this season just makes sense since the<br />

kiddos are already out of school. Whether you<br />

would like to stay in the state or venture somewhere<br />

else, I encourage you to book that trip.<br />

Raquel Jalou Orow, the owner of Pure Star<br />

Travel in Troy, agrees. “With many airlines and<br />

hotels taking the proper safety measures to keep<br />

travelers safe, as well as with the vaccine now<br />

out, I absolutely encourage everyone to travel<br />

this summer,” Orow says. “Traveling allows us to<br />

hit the refresh button in our lives and rejuvenates<br />

our body and mind.”<br />

Hilton Head, South Carolina<br />

If you are in the mood for southern hospitality,<br />

Hilton Head is another favorite of Orow’s, especially<br />

for those who are seeking an action-packed<br />

adventure including bike riding, tennis, fishing<br />

and more. It is also the home of Harbour Town<br />

Golf Links, which, since 1969, has been where<br />

the RBC Heritage on the PGA Tour has been<br />

hosted.<br />

“While there, I suggest taking a ferry to Savannah,<br />

and you will find yourself on River Street<br />

where you can enjoy shopping and dining,” Orow<br />

Mackinac Island<br />

As a kid, all I remember about Mackinac Island<br />

is the fudge (and the stuff all over the street<br />

that resembled but definitely was not fudge), so<br />

when my husband told me he wanted to book<br />

a trip with the kids there last August, I was<br />

not overly excited. I also knew that after many<br />

months of being at home, we all needed to unplug<br />

and get out.<br />

To my surprise, even during the pandemic,<br />

it was one of my favorite family trips! The kids<br />

loved that we got to leave our car behind and<br />

take a ferry to the island. Although you can rent<br />

them, we decided to not only bring our bikes<br />

with us, but also the bike carrier in case the kids<br />

got tired of pedaling. This made getting around<br />

the island so much easier, and we never had to<br />

book or wait for a horse-drawn taxi to take us<br />

into town.<br />

Between visiting Fort Mackinac, shopping in<br />

town and dining at a variety of restaurants (our<br />

favorite being Woods Restaurant), our days were<br />

pretty full. We stayed at the Inn at Stonecliffe<br />

where we could wind down at the outdoor pool,<br />

which I would highly recommend!<br />

Top of page: Raquel Orow, Amelia Orow, Alaina Orow and Gabrielle Mekani enjoyed their time at Freshfields Village<br />

in Kiawah Island. Above: Overlooking Kiawah Island, Huda Jalou, Najeb Jalou, Jacob Orow, John Orow, Raquel Orow,<br />

Amelia Orow, Alaina Orow, Gabrielle Mekani and Dianna Jalou pose at The Ocean Course’s 18th hole.<br />

Grand Rapids<br />

Although I would easily repeat our Mackinac Island<br />

trip, I was interested to hear a travel agent’s<br />

perspective. Out of the four family trips she suggested,<br />

the first was Grand Rapids, which is only<br />

a couple-hour drive from the metro Detroit area.<br />

“From world-class golf to beautiful beaches to<br />

a vibrant downtown, Grand Rapids has it all,”<br />

Orow says.<br />

For the family, she highly recommended both<br />

John Ball Zoo and Frederik Meijer Gardens, one<br />

of the nation’s most significant sculpture and<br />

botanical experiences. It includes the state’s<br />

largest tropical conservatory, five indoor theme<br />

gardens, outdoor gardens, nature trails, a boardwalk<br />

and more. If you have toddlers or younger<br />

children, Orow said to consider visiting Millennium<br />

Park, where you will find a six-acre beach<br />

and splash pad complete with sprayers, buckets<br />

and splashers.<br />

says, “You could also hop on a guided history tour<br />

aboard a trolley and learn about over 300 years of<br />

history.”<br />

Kiawah Island, South Carolina<br />

If you were hoping for a vacation full of rest and<br />

relaxation or wanted to bring along the grandparents,<br />

Orow said another spot in South Carolina to<br />

check out is Kiawah Island.<br />

She had two restaurant suggestions: The Ryder<br />

Cup Bar, which is located at the 18th hole<br />

of the Ocean Course, and Mingo Point Oyster<br />

Roast and BBQ. At the Ryder Cup, you can sit<br />

on the veranda and enjoy a cocktail while taking<br />

in incredible views of the Atlantic. It is also the<br />

perfect spot to watch the kids play on the practice<br />

green while you enjoy dinner. Mingo Point is a hit<br />

as well since they roast oysters on an open fire and<br />

serve “the best” ribs and pulled pork.<br />

Jackson Hole and Grand Teton<br />

National Park, Wyoming<br />

Orow described this family trip destination as a<br />

“400-square mile gem with everything you need.”<br />

If you are in the mood for thrill-seeking activities,<br />

there is white water rafting, rock climbing, hiking<br />

and fishing.<br />

For animal and nature lovers, she recommends a<br />

visit to Yellowstone National Park where you can not<br />

only stumble upon bison, wolves, moose, elk, bears<br />

and more, but you can see -firsthand - Old Faithful.<br />

Also visit the Grand Prismatic Spring, which, because<br />

of its breathtakingly bright colors is the most<br />

photographed thermal feature at Yellowstone.<br />

Since freelance writer Danielle Alexander did Mackinac<br />

Island with her family last year, she is currently deciding<br />

which of Orow’s four trip recommendations she plans to<br />

take the fam on this summer!<br />

14 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 15


RELIGION<br />

Bishop’s Special Appointments Announced<br />

Mar Francis Y. Kalabat, Bishop<br />

of the Chaldean Diocese of<br />

St. Thomas the Apostle, recently<br />

announced the changes that will<br />

take place within the Church as regards<br />

to the Chaldean clergy, effective August<br />

1. You may notice some new faces;<br />

we wanted to introduce them here.<br />

Father Manuel Boji, who currently<br />

serves as Pastor of Holy Martyrs<br />

Parish in Sterling Heights, will<br />

enter retirement. He has served<br />

with distinction, and we wish him<br />

luck and Godspeed. Father Selwan<br />

Taponi will be taking over for him.<br />

Father Selwan currently serves as<br />

Administrator of St. Paul Parish in<br />

Grand Blanc.<br />

Father Fadi Philip, who currently<br />

serves as Pastor at Our Lady<br />

of Perpetual Help in Warren will be<br />

replaced by Father Rudy Zoma, who<br />

is currently with St. Joseph Parish in<br />

Troy. Father Fadi will become Pastor<br />

at Sacred Heart Parish in Warren.<br />

Father Sameen Balius, currently<br />

serving as Pastor of Sacred Heart<br />

Parish has been appointed Pastor<br />

of St. Joseph Parish in Troy, and<br />

Father Pierre Konja, Associate<br />

Pastor at Holy Cross in Farmington<br />

Hills will become Pastor of St.<br />

Thomas Parish in West Bloomfield.<br />

Associate Pastor at Mother of<br />

God Parish in Southfield Father Patrick<br />

Setto has been appointed Administrator<br />

to that Parish, extending<br />

his service there for one year, and<br />

Father Matthew Zetouna, Associate<br />

Pastor at Mart Mariam Parish in<br />

Northbrook, Illinois will have his<br />

service there extended for a year.<br />

Father Andrew Seba has been<br />

appointed Associate Pastor at St.<br />

Joseph Parish in Troy. He will also<br />

be ministering periodically in Jacksonville,<br />

Florida. Father John Jaddou<br />

will also stay at St. Joseph as<br />

Associate Pastor for another year.<br />

Father Sanharib Youkhana will<br />

be appointed as the Director of Hospital<br />

and Nursing Home Ministries,<br />

an extension of his liturgical responsibilities<br />

at Mother of God Parish<br />

in Southfield, and Deacon Sermed<br />

Ashkouri will continue to serve the<br />

Chaldean Mission in Wayland, Massachusetts.<br />

These changes are designed to<br />

keep the clergy active within the<br />

community and infuse new ideas and<br />

relationships into the Parishes. St.<br />

Paul Parish assignments have yet to<br />

be announced.<br />

Father Manuel Boji Father Selwan Taponi Father Fadi Philip Father Rudy Zoma<br />

Father Sameen Balius Father Pierre Konja Father Patrick Setto Father Matthew Zetouna<br />

Father Andrew Seba Father John Jaddou Father Sanharib Youkhana Deacon Sermed Ashkouri<br />

16 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 17


in MEMORIAM<br />

RECENTLY DECEASED COMMUNITY MEMBERS<br />

Sahiel Hindo<br />

Jul 1, 1954 -<br />

Jun 2, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Wardi Yalda<br />

Youanes<br />

Feb 13, 1951 -<br />

May 30, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Thamer<br />

Hanna Namo<br />

Jun 7, 1965 -<br />

May 30, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Adel Noja<br />

(Noocha)<br />

Nov 21, 1943 -<br />

May 30, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Susan Qashat<br />

Sep 16, 1959 -<br />

May 29, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Jirjis Yousif Asee<br />

Jul 1, 1934 -<br />

May 28, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Labeba Jazrawi<br />

Mar 19, 1935 -<br />

May 28, <strong>2021</strong><br />

James “Jim”<br />

Mansoor<br />

Sep 23, 1950 -<br />

May 28, <strong>2021</strong><br />

James Mike<br />

Rayes<br />

Feb 18, 1970 -<br />

May 25, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Joseph “Joey”<br />

Saywa<br />

Mar 15, 1989 -<br />

May 24, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Ramzi Elyia<br />

Danial<br />

Mar 2, 1958 -<br />

May 22, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Butrus Jibrael Aal<br />

Eshaq<br />

Jul 1, 1940 -<br />

May 22, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Mudhafar Hasso<br />

Jan 15, 1941 -<br />

May 22, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Bernadette<br />

Jerjees Rabban<br />

Jul 1, 1935 -<br />

May 22, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Nouri Antoon<br />

Yasso<br />

Apr 1, 1931 -<br />

May 21, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Nadira “Bell”<br />

Asmaro<br />

Feb 28, 1961 -<br />

May 20, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Ferial Hesano<br />

Sep 5, 1949 -<br />

May 20, 202<br />

Souad Oram<br />

Poota<br />

May 2, 1951 -<br />

May 20, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Shafika Yalda<br />

Jul 1, 1928 -<br />

May 20, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Sabah Aziz<br />

Hanna<br />

Apr 1, 1937 -<br />

May 19, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Adward Bole<br />

Jul 1, 1948 -<br />

May 18, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Abdulahad<br />

“Ghazi” Abdal<br />

Jul 1, 1937 -<br />

May 18, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Adela Sitto<br />

“Intisar” Nalou<br />

Dec 13, 1941 -<br />

May 18, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Sami Aziz Paulos<br />

Abouna<br />

Jan 19, 1947 -<br />

May 17, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Raid Shamoon<br />

Aishoo<br />

Apr 2, 1972 -<br />

May 17, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Bernadet Aziz<br />

“Nawal” Peter<br />

Dec 17, 1946 -<br />

May 17, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Suham Bahoura<br />

Yeldo<br />

Jan 1, 1947 -<br />

May 17, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Sami Ghazi<br />

Shallal<br />

Nov 2, 1960 -<br />

May 16, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Juliet Azaria<br />

Gewarges<br />

Jul 1, 1947 -<br />

May 15, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Mariam Ishak<br />

Hanna<br />

Mar 4, 1947 -<br />

May 15, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Hassina Ayar<br />

Denha<br />

Sep 2, 1930 -<br />

May 13, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Binyamen Toma<br />

Israul<br />

Oct 25, 1945 -<br />

May 13, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Hilwa Ayoub<br />

Mousa<br />

Jul 1, 1930 -<br />

May 13, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Saad Mekhail<br />

Sep 26, 1970 -<br />

May 12, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Marta Shamoon<br />

Jan 7, 1936 -<br />

May 11, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Abdel Ahad Tobia<br />

“Abed” Seiba<br />

May 1, 1940 -<br />

May 11, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Cheryl Yaldoo<br />

Apr 12, 1958 -<br />

May 10, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Jule Shaba<br />

Jul 1, 1933 -<br />

May 8, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Viyolet Saleem<br />

Mati<br />

Jul 1, 1931 -<br />

May 7, <strong>2021</strong><br />

Bushra Razoqi<br />

Bato<br />

Apr 10, 1963 -<br />

May 7, <strong>2021</strong><br />

18 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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Haithem Sarafa: A Profile of Giving<br />

BY M. LAPHAM<br />

Haithem Sarafa came to<br />

America from Iraq as a child,<br />

found opportunity and success,<br />

then made a life-long commitment<br />

to give back to his community.<br />

He has helped students get a good<br />

education, made Christmas merry for<br />

a lot of people, including the less<br />

fortunate, and resurrected a brewery<br />

deeply engrained in Michigan history.<br />

Born in Baghdad in 1957, he<br />

came to America in 1963 with his<br />

parents Karim and Bernadette. He<br />

credits them for teaching him to give<br />

back to the community. Karim was<br />

the president of Southfield Manor for<br />

two terms from 1969-72. Bernadette<br />

was heavily involved in the Chaldean<br />

Ladies of Charity.<br />

“I enjoy giving back,” says Sarafa.<br />

“It is what my parents raised us to<br />

do.”<br />

They also taught him the value<br />

of education and sent him to Brother<br />

Rice High School in Bloomfield<br />

Hills. After graduating in 1975, he<br />

continued to give back to the school,<br />

sending all three of his sons there.<br />

“(Brother Rice) was a great place<br />

for my education, development, and<br />

my spirituality,” Sarafa says. Over<br />

the decades, many Chaldeans have<br />

passed through the halls of Brother<br />

Rice High School. Haithem Sarafa<br />

was the first to join its Spirit of<br />

Blessed Edmund Society.<br />

Sarafa jokes that his father once<br />

told him, “If you stay with a place<br />

and keep showing up, they will eventually<br />

give you an award.”<br />

In truth, it was the charity work<br />

he did for the school, specifically Boxing<br />

Night, that earned him the place<br />

in that society. The annual Boxing<br />

Night includes fellowship, food and<br />

drinks, casino games and University<br />

of Michigan collegiate boxing. The<br />

main event features an alumni match.<br />

All the money goes to the alumni<br />

scholarship fund. This year it raised<br />

enough for 18 scholarships.<br />

Like his father, Sarafa attended<br />

the University of Michigan.<br />

He earned a Bachelor of Business<br />

Administration in Accounting from<br />

the Ross School of Business in 1979,<br />

joining Bendix Corporation as a staff<br />

accountant. In 1980, he returned to<br />

U-M and graduated from the Ross<br />

School of Business in 1982 with his<br />

Haithem Sarafa plays Santa Claus for the Chaldean Community Foundation’s Breaking Barriers program.<br />

MBA in Finance.<br />

As Sarafa’s father was preparing<br />

to change careers, he convinced his<br />

son to come along with him to Law<br />

School at University of Detroit. The<br />

younger Sarafa graduated with a Juris<br />

Doctorate in Real Estate and Tax<br />

Law in 1985.<br />

After a stint practicing law in<br />

Farmington Hills, he found himself<br />

president of Domino Farms. He<br />

oversaw the formation of a petting<br />

zoo, a Frank Lloyd Wright Museum,<br />

a classic car collection, and one of<br />

his favorites, a golf course on Drummond<br />

Island for the company’s lodge.<br />

What meant the most to him,<br />

however, was the Christmas light<br />

show, which he felt he had to save.<br />

The first show in 1991 was a disaster.<br />

It disrupted traffic so badly people<br />

complained, and Domino Farms decided<br />

one year was enough.<br />

However, Sarafa did not see it<br />

as an irredeemable mess. He saw a<br />

good idea that could use some tweaking.<br />

He brought the lights back in<br />

1993, charged people $5.00 to take<br />

the drive, and made a deal with local<br />

charities to man the show one night<br />

a year. At the end of the night, the<br />

money would go to whichever charity<br />

was working.<br />

In those years, he helped raise<br />

more than a million dollars for various<br />

southeastern Michigan charities.<br />

He was named Ann Arbor Ambassador<br />

of the Year in 1994.<br />

When founder Tom Monahan<br />

sold Domino Farms in 1994, Sarafa<br />

left. From there he moved to his<br />

brother’s newly formed investment<br />

firm, Zaske, Sarafa, and Associates.<br />

They invested in a variety of<br />

things including a shopping center as<br />

far north as Traverse City. However,<br />

their most notable investment was<br />

the Frankenmuth Brewing Company,<br />

the oldest brewery in Michigan.<br />

It was originally bought on behalf of<br />

a client, but the sale fell through, so<br />

Sarafa and his brother took ownership.<br />

Sarafa is president of the brewery,<br />

which also has restaurant and banquet<br />

hall. Despite a history of overseeing<br />

restaurants from his Dominos<br />

Farms days, he acknowledges owning<br />

a restaurant is a tough business, but<br />

says he enjoys the work. Through<br />

the brewery, he found another way to<br />

give back.<br />

In his history of giving, this would<br />

mean the most to him personally,<br />

and again it would have to do with<br />

Christmas.<br />

In 2015, Sarafa had a stroke, and<br />

fortunately, for the most part, recovered.<br />

However, he could no longer<br />

shave.<br />

Frankenmuth is well known as<br />

the “Christmas Capital,” so after a<br />

number of people commented on<br />

his resemblance to Santa Claus, he<br />

decided to take up the role and play<br />

Father Christmas.<br />

“Being in Frankenmuth at Christmas,<br />

it made sense,” he says. The act<br />

of spreading joy in the famous red<br />

suit fits Haithem well. When people<br />

ask him to do things in the Santa<br />

outfit, he can’t wait to say “yes!”<br />

Each year he plays Santa for the<br />

kids in the community and gives them<br />

20 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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the money he raises goes to the Chaldean<br />

Community Foundation.<br />

He even has his younger brothers<br />

appear as elves, but the story<br />

does not end there. During the holiday<br />

season, Sarafa goes into grocery<br />

stores dressed as St. Nick and pays for<br />

the groceries of select families.<br />

Sarafa’s community outreach<br />

does not stop at his former schools<br />

or places of business, or even the<br />

Foundation. The grocery purchase<br />

embodies his philosophy – Pay it Behind<br />

You. It is a campaign he started<br />

to encourage people to help others.<br />

He gives out “Pay it Behind You”<br />

business cards after he pays for someone’s<br />

groceries, meal, or whatever.<br />

The card gives the basic idea and a<br />

link to the website. The idea is to encourage<br />

people to either do the same<br />

or give some money to charity. The<br />

website offers plenty of examples and<br />

links.<br />

Sarafa is certainly a man who<br />

has had a lot of luck in his life, but<br />

never let success stop him from being<br />

the change he wanted to see in the<br />

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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 21


Recovering from COVID: Businesses Adapt<br />

BY PAUL NATINSKY<br />

Of all the difficulties emerging<br />

during the pandemic and<br />

in the economic recovery<br />

emerging in its wake, the largest, by<br />

far, is a lack of workers and the CO-<br />

VID “hangover” among those who<br />

are returning to work.<br />

Some industries have fared better<br />

than others in the battle to bring<br />

back workers as rising vaccination<br />

rates and declining cases of COV-<br />

ID-19 allow many workplaces to get<br />

back to business.<br />

“Nobody is incentivized to work<br />

when they are making more money<br />

through government benefits, whether<br />

it’s stimulus money, the state or federal<br />

unemployment<br />

money,”<br />

said Jason Najor,<br />

an entrepreneur<br />

who owns businesses<br />

in several<br />

industries,<br />

including a cell<br />

phone remanufacturing<br />

com-<br />

Jason Najor<br />

pany, a banquet<br />

hall and several Beyond Juice healthy<br />

convenience food restaurants.<br />

“You are competing with your<br />

government, which means you have<br />

to pay people at least $17, $18 an<br />

hour.<br />

“When you do that, it eats into<br />

your profit margin, which would<br />

cause you to increase your selling<br />

prices, then your clientele gets upset<br />

at you so you’re going to lose business.<br />

So, when you lose business then<br />

how can you afford to pay people? It’s<br />

a vicious cycle.”<br />

He says the cumulative total<br />

of government benefits adds up to<br />

about $17 per hour and points out<br />

that leaves people with a choice to<br />

work for $17 per hour or do nothing<br />

and make the same money.<br />

Workers Slow to Return<br />

“Our biggest<br />

challenge has<br />

been quite simply<br />

getting applicants<br />

in the<br />

door to re-staff<br />

to pre-pandemic<br />

levels. We utilize<br />

recruiting<br />

Sylvester Sandiha tools such as indeed,<br />

hotel talent agencies, hiring<br />

The staff at Super Fair Cellular<br />

signs, referral bonuses, etc. and we<br />

just aren’t getting any action,” said<br />

Sylvester Sandiha, who, with his<br />

family, operates Pinnacle Hospitality,<br />

a hospitality management and development<br />

firm that operates a number<br />

of hotel businesses.<br />

“In the majority of cases, for the<br />

few applicants we do get, they either<br />

don’t show up for interviews or when<br />

hired just don’t come into work—<br />

even with an increase in pay and bonus<br />

structures,” he said.<br />

Najor said he is short workers in<br />

all of his businesses; his cellular company<br />

is short 10 people, Beyond Juice<br />

is short 20 people and the banquet<br />

hall is short 5 to 10 people.<br />

More government help?<br />

Some legislators<br />

are hearing<br />

the message<br />

and getting to<br />

work on solutions.<br />

According<br />

to the Wall<br />

Street Journal<br />

in June, “A proposal<br />

from Senator<br />

Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and<br />

Rep. Andy Levin<br />

Representative Andy Levin (D-MI)<br />

would give federal funding to local<br />

workforce-development groups to<br />

provide job training and placement<br />

for people out of work for more than<br />

six months; a group that is more<br />

likely to experience long-term problems,<br />

such as lower future wages and<br />

lifetime earnings and lower rates of<br />

homeownership.<br />

On the Republican side, Representative<br />

Kevin Brady of Texas<br />

and Senator Mike Crapo of Idaho<br />

have proposed allowing states to<br />

use federal jobless aid to make onetime<br />

payments of between $600 and<br />

$1,200 for people who find a job after<br />

receiving unemployment benefits.<br />

“The proposals would also accelerate<br />

a planned increase in funding for federal<br />

re-employment services, which<br />

connect benefit recipients with potential<br />

employers, and expand eligibility<br />

to contractors and gig economy<br />

workers,” reported the Wall Street<br />

Journal.<br />

Currently under congressional<br />

consideration is the Long-Term<br />

Unemployment Elimination Act,<br />

co-sponsored by Levin in the U.S.<br />

House of Representatives.<br />

Representative Levin said in a<br />

statement to the CN: “As someone<br />

who used to run a state workforce<br />

system, I know that people who have<br />

been out of the workforce for a prolonged<br />

period have the hardest time<br />

getting back in the game. My Long-<br />

Term Unemployment Elimination<br />

Act works with the state and the<br />

local workforce boards to get these<br />

people directly into subsidized job<br />

training that leads to an in-demand<br />

job with a local employer. We have<br />

got to deal with this issue and its<br />

complexity, to get American workers<br />

the skills and support they need<br />

to overcome their barriers to employment<br />

and provide employers the<br />

skilled workforce they need to fire on<br />

all cylinders once again.”<br />

That measure would, “provide<br />

targeted funding to local areas to<br />

generate work opportunities and<br />

get these Americans back into the<br />

workforce,” according to a congressional<br />

press release. The legislation<br />

provides supports to help people<br />

overcome the barriers keeping them<br />

out of the workforce – such as transportation,<br />

childcare, job readiness<br />

training, substance abuse treatment,<br />

or assistance finding a permanent job<br />

– and training programs that build<br />

skills to sustain permanent employment.<br />

“The jobs would generally last<br />

for one year,” the report explains.<br />

“This would provide enough time<br />

to accomplish valuable work and<br />

build solid experience and could be<br />

extended for an additional year to<br />

support apprenticeships and other<br />

on-the-job training.” The job could<br />

be at a private business, non-profit,<br />

employment social enterprise, or<br />

government agency.<br />

22 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


“With mandatory federal funding,<br />

the program can grow large<br />

enough to serve anyone who is longterm<br />

unemployed and wants to participate,”<br />

the report goes on. “The<br />

plan is designed to address long-term<br />

unemployment under all economic<br />

conditions — the program will automatically<br />

expand during periods<br />

of high unemployment. The bill also<br />

provides competitive grants to local<br />

areas to support innovation and investment<br />

in areas hit hardest by high<br />

poverty and chronic joblessness,<br />

which would give additional flexibility<br />

and support in the places where it<br />

is needed most.”<br />

According to the release, “These<br />

grants would support locally-driven<br />

development, worker-owned enterprises,<br />

and other strategies to ensure<br />

that area residents are part of the<br />

process and benefit from the results.”<br />

Still, recent government efforts<br />

from both sides of the aisle appear focused<br />

on the supply side, on workers,<br />

and they tend be one-size-fits-all.<br />

However, it is the massive financial<br />

incentives in COVID relief measures<br />

that erode workers’ motivation<br />

to return. Further, businesses face<br />

uneven challenges as they struggle to<br />

get to the gold standard—2019 revenue<br />

and profit levels.<br />

Uneven Challenges<br />

Some restaurants have been able<br />

to shift to a carryout-only format,<br />

reducing their real estate footprint<br />

and moving to online only ordering,<br />

which eliminates the need for<br />

cashiers. Najor said Chipotle burrito<br />

shops have experimented with this<br />

model.<br />

Big box retailer Costco bumped<br />

up its wage structure, but has increased<br />

the number of self-checkout<br />

stations, resulting in fewer, higherpaid<br />

employees, said Najor.<br />

However, in some cases, reducing<br />

physical space and employees is not<br />

an option. Sandiha said hotels cannot<br />

reduce their hours, reduce the<br />

space needed for their business, or<br />

automate employee functions.<br />

Still, they have trouble recruiting<br />

employees despite paying well above<br />

minimum wage. Short employees,<br />

Sandiha said managers end up working<br />

front desk shifts, preparing rooms<br />

and doing laundry.<br />

Everyone businessperson interviewed<br />

for this story views wellintended<br />

government efforts to provide<br />

worker relief as a disincentive<br />

for people to return to work.<br />

Sandiha said COVID protocols<br />

have created a grab-and-go dining<br />

policy, hampering the hot breakfast<br />

spreads many hotels offer their<br />

guests. Rooms are cleaned and serviced<br />

during guest stays only upon<br />

request.<br />

The overall effect is reduced amenities<br />

for guests, who then sometimes<br />

write bad reviews about their hotel<br />

stay, despite well-publicized temporary<br />

changes posted on the businesses’<br />

website and disclosed when guests<br />

book their stay.<br />

Sandiha and Najor reported many<br />

applicants applying for jobs to satisfy<br />

unemployment benefit conditions,<br />

but very few who respond to follow<br />

up calls and show up for scheduled<br />

interviews.<br />

Government subsidies for workers<br />

will phase out beginning in September<br />

when federally enhanced<br />

unemployment benefits end and extended<br />

state unemployment benefits<br />

revert to the standard 26 weeks.<br />

Everything costs more<br />

Still, Najor said<br />

the COVID labor<br />

force hangover<br />

will continue<br />

into 2022<br />

and a cycle of<br />

reduced labor<br />

and increased<br />

costs will be<br />

slow to fade.<br />

Commercial<br />

Kevin Denha<br />

real estate landlord Kevin Denha<br />

has seen prices for contract electricians,<br />

plumbers and other tradespeople<br />

increase 15-20% since the<br />

beginning of the year. He said his<br />

company, Vision Investment Partners,<br />

employs a small office staff but<br />

relies heavily on contractors.<br />

He said many of his contractors<br />

cannot respond quickly due<br />

to labor shortages of their own and<br />

cannot commit to smaller jobs. He<br />

has been forced to turn to handymen<br />

and other alternatives to keep<br />

his tenants’ properties well maintained.<br />

“You have to have a whole roster<br />

of people to fall back on. You<br />

have to have multiple vendors. I<br />

don’t like doing that, but it’s the<br />

nature of the game right now,” he<br />

said.<br />

For Denha there is a silver lining<br />

of sorts in that the high cost of<br />

construction ensures that is more<br />

COVID continued on page 41<br />

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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 23


The Art Spread: Healing Through Art<br />

BY LISA CIPRIANO<br />

Sometimes beauty and purpose<br />

emerge from tragedy and<br />

struggle. That is exactly what<br />

happened to then 27-year-old architectural<br />

student and design specialist<br />

Rawan Ita-Diaz when her life’s path<br />

and purpose changed forever after<br />

being struck by a vehicle in 2017,<br />

leaving her wheelchair-bound.<br />

“That accident took all of that<br />

away. It took all of my independence<br />

away. I suffer from mental and physical<br />

limitations due to my injuries. I<br />

felt very alone.” she explained.<br />

Ita-Diaz’s life changed drastically<br />

that day. So she naturally turned to<br />

art, specifically painting, as both a creative<br />

and emotional outlet. And from<br />

there, the seeds of The Art Spread<br />

were sown to help others do the same.<br />

“It’s my therapy and mental relief.<br />

I don’t know what I would’ve been doing<br />

for the past four years while I try to<br />

improve myself physically. Art found<br />

me and it’s my life now. It is my purpose”<br />

she said.<br />

Ita-Diaz and<br />

her cousin, Nadin<br />

Said, together<br />

developed the<br />

idea of The Art<br />

Spread to help<br />

others with various<br />

life struggles<br />

find relief and<br />

personal expres-<br />

Nadin Said,<br />

Co-founder and<br />

Managing Director<br />

sion through<br />

art; the same relief that Ita-Diaz has<br />

found and so desperately needed.<br />

The name ‘The Art Spread’ was<br />

chosen because they want to share<br />

art and spread awareness of mental<br />

health issues at the same time. The<br />

organization’s main focus is inclusion<br />

so that others can feel a sense of community<br />

and understanding and won’t<br />

feel so alone, like Ita-Diaz once did.<br />

The two cousins, who came separately<br />

to the United States from<br />

Iraq as refugees in the 1990s, are no<br />

strangers to adversity and perseverance<br />

and felt that they could help<br />

others. Ita-Diaz and Said worked together<br />

to create The Art Spread - a<br />

non-profit, 501c3 organization with<br />

the mission of helping support those<br />

with mental, physical and societal<br />

challenges showcase their experiences<br />

through art.<br />

They got to work by building<br />

their online presence and brand,<br />

Clockwise from top of page: 1. The Art Spread event participants with swag. 2. Co-founder and Creative Director Rawan Ita-Diaz. 3.<br />

Featured speaker on multiple sclerosis, Lindsey Joy Holcomb.<br />

hosting a virtual launch event for<br />

The Art Spread this past March.<br />

“We got like 60 subscribers that<br />

first day. It was a really great response!<br />

We have all kinds of people<br />

from young professionals looking to<br />

deal with the stresses of a new job,<br />

to artists, to college students looking<br />

to do this at home as a stress relief,<br />

to parents looking to get their kids<br />

involved.” explained Ita-Diaz.<br />

The idea of hosting their art and<br />

therapy workshops and events virtually<br />

was a big success, not only due<br />

to the COVID-19 pandemic but also<br />

the mobility issues that others like<br />

Ita-Diaz face.<br />

“COVID has made things more<br />

virtual, overall. But, even before the<br />

virus, if you couldn’t leave your home<br />

because of various issues, it was so hard<br />

to become involved in anything. So,<br />

we really wanted to recognize and accommodate<br />

that,” said Ita-Diaz. “But,<br />

if you want to meet in person, you can<br />

also come out to a park with us and<br />

paint. It was important to us to include<br />

both a virtual and in person experience<br />

to include everyone,” she added.<br />

The Art Spread also serves as<br />

a source of much needed connection<br />

and healing for those struggling<br />

with loneliness, isolation and mental<br />

24 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


JOHN LOUSSIA<br />

CANCER FOUNDATION<br />

Educating the community about<br />

the importance of prostate cancer<br />

screening and men’s health.<br />

The John Loussia Cancer Foundation provides<br />

financial assistance to those impacted<br />

by the high cost of medical expenses,<br />

in memory of the late John Loussia.<br />

The Art Spread offers healing and expression through art.<br />

health challenges due to or worsened<br />

by the abrupt life changes brought on<br />

by the COVID-19 world pandemic.<br />

“Out last event was on mental<br />

health awareness and how it’s just<br />

skyrocketed since COVID. We had<br />

a licensed therapist who was able to<br />

give tips on how to cope and guide<br />

them on how they can reach out to<br />

a professional for help,” Ita-Diaz said.<br />

In fact, at least one participant<br />

of that event confided that it helped<br />

her decide to see a therapist for her<br />

mental health issues. Ita-Diaz feels<br />

like she is helping to break down<br />

some barriers.<br />

“There were three Middle Eastern<br />

women in that mental health<br />

group and we were discussing how in<br />

our Chaldean culture, we traditionally<br />

don’t talk about mental health.<br />

Now, it’s changing a bit, but they<br />

never really used to recognize it,” she<br />

explained. “It’s hard enough to deal<br />

with mental health issues without<br />

having to be afraid to talk about it or<br />

ask for help,” added Ita-Diaz.<br />

Coping with anxiety and brain<br />

issues like multiple sclerosis are also<br />

topics that The Art Spread has tackled<br />

and its members have painted<br />

through.<br />

You don’t have to be an artist to<br />

enjoy the benefits of The Art Spread.<br />

Ita-Diaz creates downloadable templates<br />

that relate to each month’s<br />

subject matter for The Art Spread’s<br />

participants to print and use to paint<br />

along with her during an event. In<br />

the end, each work of art reflects the<br />

uniqueness of each participant’s personal<br />

journey through use of color<br />

and individual technique.<br />

“Quite often we can express our<br />

feelings more through colors than<br />

words, and I’m one of those people,”<br />

Ita-Diaz stated.<br />

Another way that The Art Spread<br />

brings people together through art is<br />

by promoting an ever-growing list<br />

of featured artists and helping them<br />

earn a living through their work. Its<br />

website offers pieces for sale to those<br />

who find a connection with the personal<br />

experience reflected in them or<br />

just simply because of their beauty.<br />

There are monthly newsletters, You-<br />

Tube tutorials, and artist interviews<br />

available to subscribers as well.<br />

If you would like to learn more about<br />

how to become involved in The Art<br />

Spread, visit www.theartspread.org.<br />

You can also follow them on YouTube<br />

by typing “The Art Spread” in the<br />

search bar and on social media at<br />

spread_art (Instagram) and SpreadArt<br />

(Facebook).<br />

Did you know?<br />

PROSTATE<br />

CANCER<br />

IS THE<br />

SECOND LEADING<br />

CAUSE OF DEATH<br />

ON AVERAGE MEN LIVE ABOUT<br />

5 YEARS LESS<br />

THAN WOMEN<br />

MEN HAVE A<br />

HIGHER DEATH RATE<br />

FOR MOST LEADING CAUSES OF DEATH<br />

INCLUDING CANCER, HEART DISEASE, DIABETES AND SUICIDE<br />

APPROXIMATELY<br />

34,000 MEN<br />

IN THE U.S. DIE EACH YEAR FROM PROSTATE CANCER<br />

MEN<br />

AS MANY PHYSICIAN VISITS<br />

MAKE HALF FOR PREVENTION AS WOMEN<br />

1 IN 8 MEN<br />

MEN<br />

ARE LESS INSURED<br />

THAN<br />

WOMEN<br />

PLEASE CALL YOUR PRIMARY CARE<br />

PHYSICIAN TO SCHEDULE YOUR ANNUAL EXAM<br />

IN<br />

MEN<br />

WILL BE DIAGNOSED<br />

WITH PROSTATE CANCER<br />

<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 25


‘Sheikh Tank’ Night to Kick Off Fall Investing<br />

for Ark Angel Fund<br />

BY PAUL NATINSKY<br />

Passing the hurdles of funding its<br />

first project and meeting its $1<br />

million capital goal, the Ark<br />

Angel Fund is getting ready to host<br />

its own version of the popular venture<br />

capital reality TV show, “Shark<br />

Tank.”<br />

In Shark Tank, a panel of wealthy<br />

celebrity investors hear pitches from<br />

eager entrepreneurs peddling everything<br />

from dog accessories to hightech<br />

gadgets and energy drinks.<br />

In the Ark Angel version, there<br />

will be panelists and pitches, but the<br />

structure will be more like the singing<br />

contest, American Idol - hearing<br />

proposals and choosing a winner -<br />

said Fund Advisor Tommy Haji.<br />

The talent on the advisory board<br />

is indisputable. Haji has a background<br />

in manufacturing and has 20<br />

years’ experience with Ford Motor<br />

Company. He has two engineering<br />

degrees as well as experience in real<br />

estate, logistics and retail.<br />

Martin Manna, the Fund manager,<br />

has a long history of working<br />

in the nonprofit business and has an<br />

MBA focused on banking and securities.<br />

Andrew Dickow, another Fund<br />

advisor, is the Managing Director of<br />

Townsend Street Capital, a leading<br />

lower-middle-market private equity<br />

fund based in Birmingham. Dickow<br />

was formerly a finance leader for<br />

General Mills.<br />

Saber Ammori and Nick Sandiha<br />

round off the advisory panel. Ammori<br />

is Chief Executive Officer and<br />

co-founder of Wireless Vision. He has<br />

over 25 years of experience in business<br />

management and operations.<br />

His entrepreneurial drive has led him<br />

to start several successful businesses,<br />

most of them retail oriented. Sandiha<br />

is a Managing Partner at Keystone<br />

Capital Management, a domestic limited<br />

liability company that has been<br />

in operation for almost 13 years.<br />

Slated for a September date at<br />

the Chaldean Community Foundation’s<br />

Wireless Vision Gymnasium,<br />

the event will feature an audience,<br />

five panelists and four presentations,<br />

with details to be determined. Haji<br />

said Ark Angel Fund will begin promoting<br />

the September event in July.<br />

A key feature of this event is<br />

Tom Haji<br />

that all of the presenters will be<br />

from within the Chaldean Community<br />

(the fund generally hears pitches<br />

from the community at large) and<br />

money may be awarded on the spot.<br />

Haji said all of the evening’s contestants<br />

will be thoroughly vetted so<br />

There will be<br />

panelists and<br />

pitches, but the<br />

structure will be<br />

more like the singing<br />

contest, American<br />

Idol — hearing<br />

proposals and<br />

choosing a winner.<br />

Andrew Dickow<br />

that the fiscally prudent Fund can be<br />

confident that the winner meets the<br />

Fund’s criteria and risk threshold.<br />

Haji said the idea for the ‘Sheikh<br />

Tank’ event preceded the Ark Angel<br />

Fund. It is a happy coincidence that<br />

the Fund provides a space for the<br />

event and that the event can help<br />

the Fund find qualified inventors and<br />

entrepreneurs.<br />

Founded in September 2020 under<br />

the umbrella of the Chaldean<br />

American Chamber of Commerce,<br />

the Fund seeks to kick-start new and<br />

early-stage businesses.<br />

The Fund makes awards of<br />

$25,000 to $100,000. Profits are distributed<br />

to the members.<br />

Saber Ammori<br />

To date, Fund committee members<br />

have heard about seven pitches.<br />

They have invested in a car servicing<br />

business, but other presenters have<br />

not met the committee’s standards.<br />

The name of the startup is Fix<br />

My Car. It provides mobile repair<br />

technicians to your home or office to<br />

handle common vehicle repairs, service<br />

and inspections. The whole idea<br />

is to save on time and cost versus traditional<br />

repair shops.<br />

As for the others, Haji said there<br />

has been no shortage of compelling<br />

business ideas including: a scrolling<br />

billboard; infrastructure for a<br />

camera-guided traffic control system;<br />

an augmented reality system that<br />

creates virtual, changeable real estate<br />

models; and a modern furniture<br />

manufacturer.<br />

Despite impressive presenters and<br />

interesting ideas, Haji said several of<br />

the companies presented with uncomfortably<br />

high valuations of their<br />

businesses and most were seeking<br />

loans, which the Fund does award.<br />

Committee members prefer equity<br />

investments.<br />

Ark Angel plans to continue<br />

hearing two or three pitches a month<br />

with the eventual goal of making six<br />

to eight investments per year. The<br />

Sheikh Tank event will give the<br />

Fund a push in that direction, with<br />

the dual benefit of helping Chaldeanowned<br />

businesses and benefitting the<br />

Chaldean Community Foundation.<br />

The September event is seeking<br />

Chaldean inventors and entrepreneurs<br />

in the technology, food and<br />

beverage, consumer product, retail,<br />

or e-commerce sector. The aspiring<br />

company must be based in the United<br />

States and have a valuation of less<br />

than $10 million. They also require<br />

a total addressable market (TAM) of<br />

over $250 million as well as a clear<br />

exit strategy. The prize is a potential<br />

investment of up to $100,000.<br />

The end goal for the fund remains<br />

to scale and sell companies, returning<br />

a profit to investors. For its part,<br />

the Fund will use its endeavors to<br />

benefit the Chaldean community.<br />

“We’re doing this primarily to support<br />

start-up businesses and provide<br />

long-term support to the Chaldean<br />

American Chamber of Commerce,”<br />

said Haji. “Our management fee will<br />

go toward the Chamber’s mission<br />

and core services.”<br />

26 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 27


Bright Beginnings<br />

BY SARAH KITTLE<br />

Early childhood, or the period<br />

of time from a child’s birth to<br />

when they enter kindergarten,<br />

is a crucial period in the life of<br />

a child. It is when they first learn to<br />

interact with others, and it is when<br />

they begin to develop individual<br />

habits and interests that may stay<br />

with them for life.<br />

But it is so much more than<br />

that. Children of this age are learning<br />

critical social and emotional<br />

skills, developing trust and relationships.<br />

Studies have shown<br />

that when children are comfortable<br />

and trust the people<br />

around them, they learn more<br />

quickly and successfully. Motivation<br />

and self-esteem are also<br />

highly affected by early childhood<br />

education (ECE).<br />

Preliminary education is important<br />

as it directly relates to<br />

a child’s pre-literacy, prewriting<br />

and pre-math skills. It also affects<br />

school readiness and other skills<br />

that prove essential to educating<br />

a strong workforce that can<br />

contribute to a successful global<br />

economy. The benefits of early<br />

childhood education can better<br />

entire communities, not only the<br />

child or their families.<br />

That is why the Chaldean Community<br />

Foundation (CCF) established<br />

their ECE program called<br />

“Bright Beginnings.” Bright Beginnings<br />

was created through a partnership<br />

with the Michigan Department<br />

of Education (DOE). Sam Mclaren-<br />

Fahey, CCF Citizenship Program<br />

Manager, says, “Up until 2020, almost<br />

all of our services focused on<br />

adults in the community. We knew<br />

there was a need for youth programming,<br />

and we had begun the conversation<br />

of what that would look like.”<br />

She adds, “Simultaneously, the<br />

Michigan DOE saw the need for immigrant/refugee<br />

youth programming that<br />

connected early childhood aged children<br />

with programs that would help<br />

them prepare for kindergarten. Knowing<br />

that we have a relationship with<br />

the immigrant/refugee community, the<br />

partnership was created to accomplish<br />

both organizational goals.”<br />

Much of the most critical brain<br />

development in children takes place<br />

before they reach kindergarten. In a<br />

preschool setting, children learn crucial<br />

skills like listening, sharing, and<br />

taking turns. They also learn how to<br />

healthily express emotions and cope<br />

with feelings that might otherwise be<br />

overwhelming. Learning to cooperate<br />

with other children is especially important<br />

for those that are only children<br />

or have no siblings in the home.<br />

One of the most significant benefits<br />

of ECE is teaching children a love<br />

for learning. At this age, lessons are<br />

presented as fun games and activities.<br />

They get to discover new things<br />

and are exposed to different environments<br />

than they have at home. And<br />

don’t forget the music, toys, and art<br />

supplies! These introductions serve<br />

as a catalyst for wanting to know<br />

more and can help develop a passion<br />

for lifelong learning.<br />

Positive reinforcement<br />

Children enrolled in preschool programs<br />

experience significantly more<br />

positive reinforcement than their<br />

peers that are not attending a program.<br />

The programs also emphasize<br />

building a strong attention span, a<br />

skill that will help them all through<br />

life. In preschool, children start understanding<br />

when it is time to work<br />

and when it is time to play.<br />

Most children these days have a<br />

tablet, Nook or Kindle with which to<br />

watch TV or, increasingly, videos on<br />

YouTube. But watching TV is a passive<br />

activity; it does not require any<br />

participation from the viewer.<br />

The structured activity of preschool<br />

helps kids feel safe and secure,<br />

and they come to develop healthy<br />

study habits and equate school with<br />

good feelings. That is one of the primary<br />

goals.<br />

For Bright Beginnings, qualified<br />

families must have a child in the<br />

0-5 age range to register for one of<br />

the 3 levels of classes (infant, toddler,<br />

preschool). The adult/caregiver<br />

must be able to attend all classes and<br />

stay in the classroom with their child<br />

the entire time. Each family must go<br />

through a brief intake and complete<br />

a questionnaire at the beginning and<br />

end of the course.<br />

The program involves the<br />

entire family and works in two<br />

parts: the Parent/Child classes<br />

and the Family Resource Hour<br />

appointments. The classes consist<br />

of 12 weeks of programming<br />

for parents to learn best practices<br />

and activities with their children<br />

that they can do at home.<br />

On Friday mornings, infant<br />

classes are held for children<br />

aged up to one and a half.<br />

Toddler classes for kids aged<br />

one and a half to three are on<br />

Tuesdays and Thursdays, and<br />

preschool classes for kids aged<br />

three to five are on Mondays<br />

and Wednesdays. All-week<br />

programming is a huge commitment<br />

to the community.<br />

Says Mclaren-Fahey, “The goal<br />

is to promote both early literacy and<br />

more parent/child interaction. In<br />

each class, instructors will speak/sing<br />

in both English and Arabic to support<br />

caregivers whose primary home<br />

language is Arabic while also promoting<br />

the English language skills.”<br />

ECE programs have a physical<br />

component as well. Getting into the<br />

habit of being active at an early age is<br />

key to overall lifetime health. Making<br />

music, clapping, dancing, and<br />

other fun activities can help develop<br />

children’s fine motor skills. Singing<br />

songs can build brain and body coordination.<br />

The skills that children<br />

learn while participating in music<br />

contribute to the child’s overall brain<br />

development.<br />

Each Bright Beginnings class period<br />

includes music and movement,<br />

circle time, small group work, and<br />

story time. The topics for the toddler<br />

and preschool classes include:<br />

all about me; shapes; weather; colors;<br />

transportation; farm animals; zoo<br />

animals; healthy foods; community<br />

helpers; bugs and insects; and emotions.<br />

The preschool classes also focus<br />

on kindergarten readiness skills.<br />

During the 12 weeks of class, families<br />

are introduced to programs like<br />

Great Start/Head Start, Young 4s,<br />

and other free or low-cost full time<br />

preschool resources in the area.<br />

Focus on the family<br />

The CCF also offers Family Resource<br />

Hour Appointments. Says Mclaren-<br />

Fahey, “These are afternoon appointments<br />

open to anyone with a child<br />

aged 0-5. Families don’t need to be<br />

enrolled in the classes to make one<br />

of these appointments.”<br />

In the Family Resource Hour, the<br />

CCF Bright Beginnings staff assists<br />

with any early childhood questions<br />

or needs. They can help find preschool<br />

programs and enroll families;<br />

staff can also handle kindergarten<br />

enrollment and answer questions<br />

about navigating the school system.<br />

Appointments can be used to<br />

help families find dentists, pediatricians,<br />

or other health resources for<br />

their children. This also includes<br />

finding resources for families who<br />

may have questions about their<br />

child’s development. They can also<br />

be used to learn new activities to do<br />

at home with their children.<br />

CE programs focus on harnessing<br />

kids’ natural curiosity. Teachers<br />

encourage children to ask critical<br />

questions like “why,” “what,” and<br />

“how,” (as if they need instruction<br />

on that!) The better they understand<br />

the world around them, the more interested<br />

they are in learning.<br />

Study after study has shown that<br />

children who attend an ECE program:<br />

are less likely to go to prison;<br />

are more likely to attend college; are<br />

more likely to own their own home<br />

later in life; are less likely to be on<br />

government assistance as an adult;<br />

and are less likely to develop drug<br />

dependency issues.<br />

UNESCO (United Nations<br />

Educational, Scientific and Cultural<br />

Organization) says, “Early<br />

childhood care and education is<br />

more than preparation for primary<br />

school. It aims at the holistic<br />

development of a child’s social,<br />

emotional, cognitive and physical<br />

needs in order to build a solid and<br />

broad foundation for lifelong learning<br />

and wellbeing. ECCE has the<br />

possibility to nurture caring, capable<br />

and responsible future citizens.”<br />

An investment in ECE for our<br />

children is an investment in our future.<br />

28 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


CHALDEAN COMMUNITY<br />

FOUNDATION<br />

Help<br />

Wanted?<br />

As our Nation plans<br />

to rebuild after this<br />

unprecedented time,<br />

please consider<br />

investing in one of our<br />

many new Americans.<br />

HOW WE HELP:<br />

The Career Services Team<br />

at the Chaldean Community<br />

Foundation offers one-on-one<br />

assistance to help individuals<br />

identify their goals and<br />

develop their careers.<br />

SERVICES INCLUDE:<br />

• Resume Building and Cover Letter Writing<br />

• Job Application Completion<br />

• FAFSA Completion<br />

• Mock Interviews<br />

• Employer Referrals<br />

• Training Opportunities<br />

• Career Fairs<br />

• Access to Transportation via the<br />

Michael J George Chaldean Loan Fund<br />

To inquire about hiring one of our clients and having your business added to our job bank,<br />

please call or email Elias at 586-722-7253 or elias.kattoula@chaldeanfoundation.org<br />

CHALDEAN<br />

AMERICAN<br />

CHAMBER OF<br />

COMMERCE<br />

CHALDEAN COMMUNITY FOUNDATION 3601 15 MILE ROAD, STERLING HEIGHTS, MI 48310 586-722-7253 CHALDEANFOUNDATION.ORG


Left: Overview of Shenandoah<br />

Country Club<br />

Below, from left: 1. Splashpad<br />

fun on the pool’s opening day.<br />

2. The new pool area is making<br />

a splash. 3. Poolside service.<br />

Shenandoah Goes Private<br />

BY SARAH KITTLE<br />

Shenandoah Country Club,<br />

with its lush rolling hills and<br />

long history of community<br />

building, has in <strong>2021</strong> taken the next<br />

logical step to become a private club.<br />

With more than three decades of service<br />

to more than five generations of<br />

Chaldean-Americans, Shenandoah<br />

was already exclusive to some extent.<br />

Historically, country clubs have<br />

been solely the domain of the<br />

wealthy – mostly white, older men –<br />

the ‘upper echelons of society.’ Those<br />

coveted memberships have been an<br />

aspiration for some and a birthright<br />

for others.<br />

But before COVID-19 made its<br />

grand entrance, country clubs across<br />

the country were failing. According<br />

to a National Club Association<br />

study in 2014, club memberships had<br />

dropped 20% since 1990, and a study<br />

by the Pellucid Corporation found<br />

that from 2002 to 2016, the number<br />

of golfers in the country declined by<br />

nearly 10 million. More than 400<br />

American golf courses closed between<br />

2017 and 2019.<br />

Conversely, 2019 saw the expansion<br />

of Shenandoah - the club, the<br />

course, the outdoor pool and dining<br />

area. With the COVID pandemic<br />

fueling the “work from anywhere”<br />

mentality, driving ranges and tee<br />

sheets were filled to capacity. In fact,<br />

according to Golf Pass, 2020 was<br />

the “best year for golf rounds since<br />

1997, when Tiger Woods first broke<br />

through at the Masters.”<br />

The National Golf Foundation<br />

reports that rounds played in the US<br />

are up by 50 million year-over-year.<br />

This newfound enthusiasm for golf is<br />

shaking up the private club business<br />

after a decade of oversupply, maturing<br />

memberships and club closures.<br />

As for Shenandoah, according to<br />

club president Raad Kathawa, “The<br />

community deserves a private club.<br />

We felt for a long time that with the<br />

younger generation getting into golf,<br />

we needed to make that change.”<br />

The benefits of going private? Private<br />

courses get less play and more<br />

care than public courses, facilities are<br />

typically better stocked and staffed<br />

and will sometimes include chipping<br />

areas and practice bunkers as well as<br />

the usual driving range and practice<br />

green. Of course, you are playing the<br />

same course over and over so there<br />

has to be some challenge and intrigue.<br />

Private courses<br />

also offer speed and<br />

serenity. Tee times<br />

may be 10 minutes<br />

apart rather than<br />

the 7-8 minutes for<br />

public course, and<br />

weekdays and Sunday<br />

afternoons are<br />

Raad Kathawa usually less congested.<br />

“The course is<br />

in better repair, “says Kathawa, “Tee<br />

times are available, and golf revenue<br />

is better.”<br />

That may explain why 89% of the<br />

members at Shenandoah were in favor<br />

of going private. Kathawa states,<br />

“We are currently at 260 golf members<br />

committed, with another 30 on<br />

the waiting list. This exceeds our expectations.”<br />

Shenandoah, like many country<br />

clubs, offers a pool area (with new<br />

splash pad), fitness center and all<br />

manner of social activities. Because<br />

the club is now private, members<br />

have a better opportunity to get to<br />

know each other and create familylike<br />

bonds.<br />

The true cost of membership adds<br />

on your restaurant monthly minimum,<br />

fees for carts, bag storage, locker<br />

and tournaments, miscellaneous<br />

assessments, and then there are the<br />

huge tips. Club membership starts to<br />

approach economic sense, however,<br />

when golfers pair up. Two or more<br />

avid golfers at the same home address<br />

can make a family club membership<br />

efficient, even if they have to live at<br />

the clubhouse all season.<br />

COVID-19 affected businesses<br />

everywhere, and Shenandoah was no<br />

exception. “It was a major setback,”<br />

says Kathawa. “Without banquet<br />

earnings, our bread and butter, we<br />

were bleeding.” Revenue was down<br />

by 70%. They needed to make more<br />

revenue on the golf side.<br />

“With God’s help, and members<br />

paying dues, the PPP (Paycheck Protection<br />

Program) money helped us<br />

stay afloat,” states Kathawa.<br />

Even now, the club suffers with<br />

staffing issues. They have had to<br />

change operation hours and pay out<br />

“a lot of overtime.” Kathawa shares,<br />

“We are still short nine line cooks<br />

throughout our three kitchens.”<br />

The new pool/splashpad/kitchen,<br />

a $3 million project that was<br />

financed through member’s dues<br />

collected, can serve more than 500<br />

diners on any weekend. Members are<br />

happy that the poolside services no<br />

longer rely on an inside kitchen.<br />

New pool rules and a newly instituted<br />

dress code are just some of the<br />

changes you’ll see at Shenandoah.<br />

“We will continue to make changes<br />

as the average age of our members<br />

decreases,” says Kathawa.<br />

PHOTOS BY DANY ASHAKA<br />

30 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 31


CULTURE<br />

The Jewish Community of Iraq - History and Influence<br />

BY ADHID MIRI, PHD<br />

PART II – The Farhud and Exodus<br />

In just a few decades of the 20th<br />

century, most of the Jewish communities<br />

- some with histories<br />

stretching back thousands of years -<br />

have been ‘ethnically cleansed’ from<br />

Arab countries. They fled not war,<br />

but systematic persecution.<br />

Once an ally of Israel during the<br />

Shah years, the Islamic Republic of<br />

Iran is now acting as enemy. The<br />

number of Iranian Jews has fallen<br />

drastically, from 80,000 to about<br />

20,000 since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.<br />

For centuries, Jews were well integrated<br />

into Iraqi society. Iraq was<br />

a generally a tolerant, multicultural<br />

society, with an Islamic majority<br />

composed of both Sunnis and Shiites,<br />

and significant Kurdish, Christian,<br />

and Jewish populations. From<br />

the late Ottoman period onward, as<br />

Iraq modernized, Jews formed an important<br />

segment of the middle and<br />

working classes—active in business,<br />

government, professions, academics,<br />

music, literature, and the trades.<br />

In 1910, records show approximately<br />

50,000 Jews living in Baghdad,<br />

roughly a quarter of the population<br />

of just over 200,000. By 1949,<br />

an estimated 130,000 Jews lived in<br />

Iraq, primarily in Baghdad, Basra,<br />

Hilla and Mosul. In the Kurdish region<br />

of Iraq, over 20,000 Jewish people<br />

lived in the villages and Kurdish<br />

towns such as Zakho, Aqra, Duhok,<br />

Amadiyya, Zibar, and Sulaymaniyah.<br />

Many immigrated to Israel in the<br />

early 1950s.<br />

The Jewish community of Baghdad<br />

ran a variety of religious, educational,<br />

and social welfare institutions.<br />

Community documents<br />

provide a vivid and unparalleled record<br />

of Baghdad’s Jewish communal<br />

life from the end of the Ottoman era<br />

to the early 1970s.<br />

As seen from the many locations<br />

mentioned in their corporate letterheads,<br />

prominent Jewish families<br />

in Baghdad established branches of<br />

their businesses in Britain, India, and<br />

the Far East. Maintaining their financial<br />

and familial ties with Iraq, they<br />

formed an international network in<br />

which Iraqi commerce was an essential<br />

component. The Sassoons and<br />

several other prominent Baghdadi<br />

Jewish families played an influential<br />

role in the development of business<br />

and manufacturing in Bombay, Hong<br />

Kong, Singapore, and elsewhere in<br />

the Far East.<br />

The Farhud<br />

When the Iraqi State became independent<br />

in 1929, there was an<br />

increase in anti-Semitism, which<br />

accelerated after the appearance of<br />

the German ambassador A. Grobbe<br />

in Baghdad in 1932. In the days of<br />

the pro-Axis revolution of Rashid<br />

Ali Al-Gailani, riots against the Jews<br />

took place with the passive support<br />

of both the army and police.<br />

The Farhud (1941)<br />

The unraveling of Jewish life in<br />

Iraq began in the mid part of the 20th<br />

century, accelerating after the rise of<br />

Nazism in Germany and the proliferation<br />

of anti-Jewish propaganda.<br />

In June 1941, in the aftermath of the<br />

defeat of the pro-Nazi Iraqi regime,<br />

an anti-Jewish attack broke out in<br />

Baghdad during the Jewish festival<br />

of Shavuot. The unprecedented attack,<br />

known as the Farhud (“violent<br />

dispossession”) shattered the sense of<br />

safety and security of the Jews.<br />

By this time there were approximately<br />

150,000 Jews living in Iraq.<br />

Many of them worked in banking,<br />

commerce, government offices and<br />

farming. When the Farhud pogroms<br />

broke out immediately following the<br />

overthrow of the Rashid Ali government,<br />

which was inspired by the pro-<br />

Nazi Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin<br />

al-Husseini, the city of Baghdad was<br />

in a state of power vacuum.<br />

The set of circumstances that<br />

allowed the pogroms included a<br />

combination of Nazi propaganda,<br />

including: the foundation of the<br />

“Al-Fatwa,” the Iraqi version of the<br />

Hitler Jugend (Youth); the influence<br />

of the Arab Revolt in Palestine; and<br />

the rage of the mob following the<br />

Iraqi defeat and heavy losses in the<br />

Anglo-Iraqi War.<br />

Following the collapse of a shortlived<br />

pro-Nazi government and before<br />

British forces entered Baghdad,<br />

violent rioting ensued. From June<br />

1 to 2, 1941, an estimated 180 Jews<br />

were killed, and hundreds were injured,<br />

while great numbers of Jewish<br />

homes and businesses were looted<br />

and destroyed. The most horrific acts<br />

of murder and rape were committed.<br />

Rioting mobs circled Baghdad neighborhoods<br />

armed with knives, axes,<br />

and firearms, some even carrying objects<br />

and furniture looted from Jewish<br />

homes. The murder victims were<br />

buried in a mass grave in Baghdad.<br />

There was also looting in many other<br />

cities at around the same time.<br />

The Iraqi Jewish Farhud experience<br />

proved to be a turning point for<br />

the Jewish community. The Farhud,<br />

with its unprecedented anti-Jewish<br />

outbreak of violence, forever ended<br />

the comfort, safety, and continuity of<br />

Iraqi Jewry.<br />

In 1945 there were frequent demonstrations<br />

against the Jews and especially<br />

against Zionism, and with<br />

the proclaimed partition of Palestine<br />

in 1947, the Jews were in danger of<br />

their lives. Many received harsh legal<br />

sentences and were forced to pay<br />

heavy fines. After the establishment<br />

of Israel in 1948, the practice of Zionism<br />

became a capital crime.<br />

1948, the year of Israel’s independence,<br />

was a rough year for the<br />

Jews of Iraq. In July, the government<br />

passed a law making all Zionist activity<br />

punishable by execution, with a<br />

minimum sentence of seven years’<br />

imprisonment.<br />

In August, Jews were forbidden<br />

to engage in banking or foreign currency<br />

transactions.<br />

In September, Jews were dismissed<br />

from their jobs at the railways,<br />

the post office, the telegraph department,<br />

and the Finance Ministry on<br />

the grounds that they were suspected<br />

of “sabotage and treason.”<br />

In October, the discharge of all<br />

Jewish officials and workers from all<br />

governmental departments was ordered<br />

and the issuance of export and<br />

import licenses to Jewish merchants<br />

was forbidden. To end the horrible<br />

year, in December the Iraq government<br />

suggested to oil companies<br />

operating in Iraq that no Jewish employees<br />

be accepted.<br />

A major event occurred in September<br />

of 1948 when Shafiq Ades,<br />

a wealthy Iraqi- Jewish businessman<br />

of Syrian origin, was executed by<br />

hanging on charges of selling weapons<br />

to Israel and supporting the Iraqi<br />

Communist Party. He was born to<br />

a wealthy family based in Aleppo,<br />

Syria, and had migrated to Iraq and<br />

based himself in Basra.<br />

Ades’ main business activity was<br />

the establishment and management<br />

of the Ford Motor car company agency<br />

in Iraq. He also partnered with a<br />

Muslim named Naji Al-Khedhairi<br />

in purchasing military metal scrap<br />

left in Iraq by the British army and<br />

selling the unusable parts after usable<br />

parts were sold to the government of<br />

Iraq.<br />

32 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


In July 1948, Iraq made Zionist<br />

affiliation a criminal offense. When<br />

arrested, Ades was accused simultaneously<br />

of being a Zionist and a<br />

Communist. Ades accumulated business<br />

and personal ties with high-profile<br />

Iraqi notables and officials and<br />

even had accessibility to the regent<br />

Abdul Ilah. The Ford importer was<br />

by 1948 the wealthiest Jewish individual<br />

in Iraq.<br />

With one historian calling it the<br />

“greatest shock to the Jewish community<br />

[of Iraq],” the execution of<br />

Ades had a profound impact on the<br />

Jewish community. Ades was both<br />

assimilated to Iraq and a non-Zionist<br />

Jew. The affair significantly reduced<br />

support for assimilation into Iraqi society<br />

and increased support for emigration<br />

as a solution to the crisis in<br />

the Iraqi Jewish community. There<br />

are streets in the Israeli cities that are<br />

named after Ades.<br />

In 1950, the ban was lifted and<br />

the Iraqi government issued an edict<br />

allowing the Jews to leave the country<br />

if they forfeited their Iraqi citizenship.<br />

The government of Israel,<br />

the Jewish Agency and the Joint<br />

Organization combined to carry out<br />

“Operation Ezra and Nehemiah,” in<br />

which 120,000 Jews were brought to<br />

Israel from Iraq. The edict decreed<br />

that each Jew of age ten and up could<br />

take a limited amount of money with<br />

them as they left. Many Jews were<br />

forced to leave their significant property<br />

behind for free.<br />

One year later, the property of<br />

Jews who emigrated was frozen and<br />

economic restrictions were placed<br />

on Jews who chose to remain in the<br />

country.<br />

In 1952, the Iraqi government<br />

closed the borders of the country<br />

once again and did not allow the remaining<br />

Jews to emigrate. Iraq’s government<br />

barred Jews from emigrating<br />

and publicly hanged two Jews after<br />

falsely charging them with hurling<br />

a bomb at the Baghdad office of the<br />

U.S. Information Agency.<br />

Eleven years later, in 1963, the<br />

newly established Ba’ath government<br />

imposed further restrictions on<br />

the Jews. The sale of property was<br />

forbidden, and all Jews were forced<br />

to carry yellow identity cards.<br />

In 1967, following the Six Day<br />

War, the treatment of Jews worsened.<br />

Some 3,000 were arrested and fired<br />

from their jobs, their bank accounts<br />

were frozen, Jewish-owned businesses<br />

were closed, trade deals signed<br />

by Jews were voided, and many telephone<br />

lines in Jewish homes were<br />

disconnected. Jews were placed under<br />

house arrest for long periods of<br />

time or restricted to the cities.<br />

Persecution was at its worst in<br />

1968. On January 27th of that year,<br />

scores of Iraqi Jews were jailed upon<br />

the discovery of the so-called local<br />

“spy ring” composed of Jewish<br />

businessmen. Fourteen men, eleven<br />

of them Jews, were accused of spying<br />

for Israel. The accused were put<br />

on staged sham trials, at the end of<br />

which some were sentenced and<br />

hanged in public squares in Baghdad<br />

while others died of torture. Due to<br />

international pressure, the Iraqi government<br />

allowed the remaining Jews<br />

to leave for Israel. As of 2014, there<br />

were only an estimated 60 Jews living<br />

in Baghdad.<br />

Many Iraqi Jews felt rage and frustration<br />

at their loyalty to the state<br />

being doubted. Shalom Darwish, the<br />

secretary of the Jewish community<br />

in Baghdad, for instance, refused to<br />

renounce his Iraqi citizenship and<br />

chose to flee the country covertly.<br />

“I inherited my Iraqite’s from my fathers<br />

and grandfathers just as I inherited<br />

the blood in my veins,” he wrote.<br />

Clockwise from top left:<br />

1. Bar-Mitzvah Celebration in 1961<br />

2. Iraqi Jews with Hakham Sasson Khadhoori<br />

3. Iraqi Jews being airlifted to Israel in the Exodus of 1950-1951<br />

4. 1947 Iraq’s Beauty Queen Renee Dangoor (in Arabic)<br />

5. Baghdadi Jewish Girls wearing traditional Abayya<br />

“I could not turn my citizenship into<br />

a piece of paper that you hand to a<br />

clerk to be put together with hundreds<br />

of others. My Iraqi citizenship<br />

was born thousands of years ago, before<br />

the grandfathers of those claiming<br />

to be Iraqis ever came to Iraq.”<br />

The Jewish community in Baghdad<br />

was founded in the mid-eighth century<br />

and from the 9th-11th centuries<br />

was the seat of the Exilarch (Resh<br />

Galutah).<br />

The community continued to<br />

function to the extent possible from<br />

1950 through the 1970s despite significant<br />

constraints. The recovered<br />

documents provide a vivid picture<br />

of the persistence of Jewish organizational<br />

life in Baghdad with the dwindling<br />

numbers of Jews and increasing<br />

insecurity. Jews and other minorities<br />

faced ongoing persecution following<br />

the revolution of 1958 and the rise<br />

of the Ba’athist Party in 1963, culminating<br />

in the public hanging of nine<br />

Jews in January of 1969.<br />

In response to international pressure,<br />

the Baghdad government quietly<br />

allowed most of the remaining<br />

Jews to emigrate in the early 1970s,<br />

even while leaving other restrictions<br />

in force. Most of Iraq’s remaining<br />

Jews were now too old to leave. They<br />

had been pressured by the government<br />

to turn over title, without compensation,<br />

to over millions of dollars’<br />

worth of Jewish community property.<br />

Only one synagogue continued to<br />

function in Iraq, “a crumbling buffcolored<br />

building tucked away in an<br />

alleyway” in Bataween, once Baghdad’s<br />

main Jewish neighborhood.<br />

Baghdad’s Jewish quarter, in Taht al-<br />

Takia, no longer exists.<br />

The Jewish community had a<br />

presence in many Iraqi cities and<br />

provinces such as Hilla (Babel),<br />

A’anna, Rumadi, Duhok, and Erbil.<br />

In recent years, Jews in Iraq were<br />

permitted to live in two cities only –<br />

Baghdad and Basra. They numbered<br />

about 500 in total.<br />

Operation Ezra and Nehemiah<br />

From 1949 to 1951, 104,000 Jews<br />

were evacuated from Iraq in Operation<br />

Ezra & Nehemiah (named after<br />

the Jewish leaders who took their<br />

people back to Jerusalem from exile<br />

in Babylonia beginning in 597<br />

JEWISH continued on page 32<br />

<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 33


JEWISH continued from page 31<br />

B.C.E.); another 20,000 were smuggled<br />

out through Iran.<br />

The number of Jews in Baghdad<br />

decreased from 100,000 to 77,000<br />

and after the mass exodus to Israel.<br />

In 1968, there were only an estimated<br />

2,000 Jews left in Iraq. With the<br />

establishment of Israel, hundreds of<br />

young Jews were arrested on charges<br />

of Zionist activity and two Zionist<br />

leaders were publicly hanged in<br />

Baghdad. On January 27, 1969, nine<br />

other Jews were hanged on charges of<br />

spying for Israel.<br />

Iraqi activists still regularly<br />

charge that Israel used violence to<br />

engineer the exodus. The synagogue<br />

bombings of 1950 were such event.<br />

Iraqi nationalists threw bombs at<br />

Jewish institutions and synagogues in<br />

Baghdad, and Iraqi law forbade the<br />

Jews to leave the country.<br />

From the start of the emigration<br />

law in March 1950 until the end of<br />

the year, 60,000 Jews registered to<br />

leave Iraq.<br />

Two months before the expiration<br />

of the law, by which time about<br />

85,000 Jews had registered, another<br />

bomb at the Masuda Shemtov Synagogue<br />

killed either 3 or 5 Jews and injured<br />

many others. While Israeli officials<br />

of the time vehemently deny it,<br />

historians report that “the belief that<br />

the bombs had been thrown by Zionist<br />

agents was shared by those Iraqi<br />

Jews who had just reached Israel.”<br />

Iraqi authorities eventually<br />

charged three members of the Zionist<br />

underground with perpetrating<br />

some of the explosions. Two of those<br />

charged, Shalom Salah Shalom and<br />

Yosef Ibrahim Basri, were subsequently<br />

found guilty and executed,<br />

whilst the third was sentenced to<br />

a lengthy jail term. Salah Shalom<br />

claimed in his trial that he was tortured<br />

into confessing, and Yosef Basri<br />

maintained his innocence throughout.<br />

Education<br />

Until Operation Ezra and Nehemiah,<br />

there were 28 Jewish educational institutions<br />

in Baghdad. Sixteen were<br />

under the supervision of the community<br />

committee and the rest were<br />

privately run. The number of pupils<br />

reached 12,000; many others learned<br />

in foreign and government schools.<br />

An estimated 400 students studied<br />

medicine, law, economics, pharmacy,<br />

and engineering in these schools. In<br />

1951, the Jewish school for the blind<br />

was closed; it was the only school<br />

of its type in Baghdad. The Jews of<br />

Baghdad had two hospitals in which<br />

the poor received free treatment, and<br />

several philanthropic services. Out<br />

of 60 synagogues in 1950, only seven<br />

remained in 1960.<br />

The Alliance School (the Israeli<br />

Federation) is considered one<br />

of the oldest schools that provided<br />

service to the Israeli community in<br />

Iraq. It was established in 1864 and<br />

worked to allocate classes for teaching<br />

religious books to the Jews and<br />

preaching its concepts, especially<br />

the Talmud. It had always taught the<br />

Hebrew and Arabic languages, in addition<br />

to the general curriculum, and<br />

it is clear that the aforementioned<br />

school graduated caravans of young<br />

men, most of whom played a prominent<br />

role in Iraqi society.<br />

Branches of the school were<br />

established in Mosul, Basra and<br />

Amara. In 1903, the Israeli Union<br />

Association established a school for<br />

girls’ education in Baghdad, then in<br />

Basra, Mosul and Amarah. In 1921,<br />

construction was completed for the<br />

Laura Khadouri School for Girls,<br />

built by Azar Khadouri and named<br />

Clockwise from top of page: 1. Mr. and Mrs. Naim and Renee Dangoor<br />

2. King Faisal I visited the Baghdad Jewish community with<br />

Chief Rabbi Ezra Ruben Dangoor and community notables<br />

3. Sir Naim Dangoor and Queen Elizabeth II 4. Tomb of Al-Kifil,<br />

near Al Hilla, believed to belong to the biblical prophet Ezekiel.<br />

after his wife.<br />

Education spread in Baghdad<br />

as the number of pupils enrolled in<br />

Jewish schools in Iraq reached 8,228<br />

- distributed among only twenty-six<br />

schools in five Iraqi cities. Resources<br />

for the schools came from multiple<br />

destinations but most of them were<br />

the outcome of what the wealthy<br />

Jews donated in Iraq.<br />

Jews in Israel<br />

With Jews largely gone from Iraq,<br />

memories survive in Israel. Drive<br />

west to the shores of the Mediterranean<br />

- just a day’s journey geographically<br />

but a world away politically -<br />

and there is a lament inscribed at the<br />

entrance to the Babylonian Jewry<br />

Heritage Centre in Israel - “The Jewish<br />

community in Iraq is no more.”<br />

It is no accident that such a somber<br />

epitaph to Iraq’s Jews should be<br />

found in Israel, where tens of thousands<br />

of them fled after 1948 amid<br />

the violent spasms that accompanied<br />

the birth of that state.<br />

That transplanting of an educated,<br />

vibrant, and creative community<br />

unquestionably enriched Israel, but it<br />

also denuded Iraq of a minority that<br />

had long contributed to its political,<br />

economic, and cultural identity.<br />

This article is dedicated to preserving<br />

the memory of the near-extinct<br />

Jewish communities, which can<br />

never return to what and where they<br />

once were - even if they wanted to.<br />

Seen in this light, it is an expression<br />

of a common tragedy of oppressed<br />

indigenous, Middle Eastern people.<br />

The story is repeated in the 21st century<br />

as their fellow Christian, Yazidis,<br />

Mandeans and others struggle for<br />

recognition and restitution.<br />

Read more about the Jews in Israel on<br />

our website at chaldeannews.com.<br />

Acknowledgement of excerpts from<br />

Wikipedia and articles by Shamuel<br />

Moreh, Saad Salloum (Policies and<br />

Ethnicities of Iraq, Minorities in Iraq),<br />

Abbas Baghdadi (Baghdad in the<br />

Twenties), Mazin Lattif (Iraqi Jews),<br />

Yacoub Yousif Goreyh (The Jews of<br />

Iraq), Judge Zuhair Karim Abboud,<br />

Maher Chmaytelli - Jeffrey Heller -<br />

Stephen Farrell, Nostalgia Journey<br />

in the History of the Jews of Iraq by<br />

Yousif Rizq Allah Ghanima, and online<br />

interviews of Iraqi Jews by Kamal Yaldo.<br />

Special editing by Jacqueline Raxter.<br />

34 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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sports<br />

Sacred Heart Doubles Duos Pump Out Victories<br />

BY STEVE STEIN<br />

Two all-Chaldean girl’s tennis<br />

doubles teams were double<br />

trouble for their opponents<br />

this spring.<br />

Sisters Marisa and Kayla Nafso<br />

and close friends Noor Simon and<br />

Angelina Kakos were state champions<br />

at No. 1 and No. 3 doubles,<br />

respectively, for Bloomfield Hills<br />

Academy of the Sacred Heart, which<br />

won the Division 4 team state championship<br />

for the third straight year<br />

and seventh time since 2012.<br />

The Nafso sisters and Simon and<br />

Kakos each were the No. 1 seed in their<br />

bracket at the state tournament and<br />

went undefeated in four matches there.<br />

Their season records were equally as<br />

impressive. The Nafso sisters, who live<br />

in Bloomfield Hills, were 21-3. Simon,<br />

a Bloomfield Hills resident, and Kakos,<br />

from Rochester Hills, were 23-3.<br />

Their accomplishments were particularly<br />

remarkable because only<br />

Marisa Nafso, a junior, had substantial<br />

playing experience for Sacred<br />

Heart before this season, mainly because<br />

there was no season last spring<br />

because of the COVID-19 pandemic.<br />

As a freshman in 2019, Marisa<br />

Nafso won a No. 2 doubles state<br />

championship with senior Nolwenn<br />

Crosnier. They were 20-5. Marisa<br />

Nafso also was 7-2 at No. 3 singles.<br />

Simon, a senior this season, was 2-1<br />

at No. 3 doubles in 2018 and 0-3 at<br />

No. 3 and No. 4 doubles in 2019. Kakos,<br />

a junior this season, was 3-0 at<br />

No. 4 doubles in 2019.<br />

Neither the Nafso sisters nor Simon<br />

and Kakos had played tennis<br />

together competitively before this<br />

season, but they weren’t strangers to<br />

the sport.<br />

“Kayla and I practice together<br />

year-round and know each other’s<br />

strengths and weaknesses,” Marisa<br />

Nafso said about herself and her sister,<br />

a freshman this season. “We also play<br />

two other sports together for Sacred<br />

Heart (basketball and field hockey),”<br />

she said. “That helped us build our<br />

communication and teamwork skills<br />

prior to this tennis season.”<br />

Being doubles partners and sisters<br />

had its advantages and disadvantages,<br />

the sisters said. In the end, they<br />

said, the advantages outweighed the<br />

disadvantages.<br />

“Because we were doubles partners,<br />

we were around each other<br />

From left: Number one doubles state champions Marisa (left) and Kayla Nafso. Number three doubles state champions Angelina<br />

Kakos (left) and Noor Simon.<br />

more than we usually are,” Marisa<br />

Nafso said. “That was challenging<br />

because it made it difficult to separate<br />

home life from tennis.<br />

“Plus, because we’re so close, we<br />

found it challenging to control our<br />

emotions at times when we were<br />

playing. We could pump up each<br />

other quickly, but we could get down<br />

on ourselves if even one of us was<br />

having a bad day.”<br />

Simon said she’s close friends<br />

with Kakos, and their families are<br />

close. “Angelina and I have hung<br />

out together a lot,” Simon<br />

said. “Because of that, we<br />

were able to communicate<br />

well during our matches. We<br />

didn’t get mad. We talked<br />

things out.”<br />

Kakos said she and Simon<br />

were on the same wavelength<br />

on the tennis court because<br />

of their friendship. That was<br />

important to her because of<br />

why she enjoys playing doubles.<br />

“I like having a partner to rely<br />

on, and for a partner to rely on me,”<br />

she said.<br />

First-year coach Chris Shaya<br />

guided Sacred Heart to the team<br />

state championship. The Gazelles<br />

scored 29 points at the state tournament<br />

in early June in Kalamazoo,<br />

beating runner-up Traverse City St.<br />

Francis by six points.<br />

“Our girls did a great job at the<br />

state tournament, even though only<br />

four had ever played at state before<br />

this season and we didn’t play our best<br />

Chris Shaya<br />

tennis there,” Shaya said. “We were<br />

young this season, but we had a lot of<br />

hidden gems. The girls got better at<br />

handling pressure as the season went<br />

on. St. Francis had a lot of juniors and<br />

seniors. They thought this was the<br />

year they could get us. They couldn’t.”<br />

Neither the Nafso sisters nor Simon<br />

and Kakos faced an opponent<br />

from St. Francis in the state tournament.<br />

The Nafso sisters rallied from<br />

a second-set loss to defeat Delanie<br />

Minnema and Caroline Rudolph<br />

from Grand Rapids Northpointe<br />

Christian 7-6 (3),<br />

2-6, 6-1 in the No. 1 doubles<br />

state championship match.<br />

That was the only set<br />

the Nafso sisters lost at the<br />

state tournament.<br />

Simon and Kakos didn’t<br />

lose a set in Kalamazoo.<br />

They defeated Hannah Nelson<br />

and Brooke Tietz from<br />

Grand Rapids West Catholic<br />

7-6 (5), 6-4 in the No. 3 doubles<br />

state championship match.<br />

Shaya, 41, a former star high<br />

school tennis star in Michigan and<br />

Florida and University of Michigan<br />

tennis player, has been giving private<br />

tennis lessons for nearly 20 years. He’s<br />

the tennis director at Bloomfield Tennis<br />

& Fitness in Bloomfield Township.<br />

Shaya coached the Troy High<br />

School boy’s tennis team in 2005 and<br />

2006, leading the Colts to a fifthplace<br />

finish at the state tournament<br />

both years. He put together his lineup<br />

at Sacred Heart before the season<br />

with input from the players.<br />

“I asked for feedback. I didn’t<br />

want to be a dictator,” he said. “As<br />

it turned out, everybody on the team<br />

got along so well that constructing<br />

the lineup took care of itself.”<br />

Marisa Nafso and she and her sister<br />

each wanted to play No. 1 doubles,<br />

“but we weren’t sure we would<br />

play together because we’re sisters.<br />

I was supposed to play singles, but I<br />

thought I could be more of an asset<br />

to the team as a doubles player.”<br />

Shaya said his theme for the season<br />

was simple. “We didn’t want to have<br />

any self-inflicted wounds, like a double-fault<br />

on a serve or a missed return.<br />

The girls bought into that,” he said.<br />

The girls also bought into other<br />

aspects of Shaya’s coaching. “What<br />

our coach said always made a lot of<br />

sense,” Kakos said. “Coach Shaya<br />

always said to worry only about our<br />

match, to focus on what we needed<br />

to do,” said Simon, who graduated<br />

from Sacred Heart this spring and<br />

plans to attend Oakland University<br />

in pursuit of a career in dentistry.<br />

Kayla Nafso said a key to Sacred<br />

Heart’s success was everyone having<br />

mutual respect for each other.<br />

“Everyone got along well, upperclassmen<br />

and lowerclassmen,” she<br />

said. “Our success also was the result<br />

of the coaching and support we received<br />

from our coaches and parents.<br />

Every practice was a great practice<br />

and every match brought us closer<br />

together.”<br />

PHOTOS BY SUE SPANGLER<br />

36 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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hard to face alone.<br />

For Your Best Health.<br />

In therapy your trilingual therapist will help you<br />

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<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 37


DOCTOR is in<br />

The Importance of Orthodontics and Dentistry<br />

With regular visits to the<br />

dentist from a young age,<br />

a dentist can help identify<br />

an ideal time to refer a child to an orthodontist<br />

for early intervention. At<br />

this time, the orthodontist can evaluate<br />

and address any complications<br />

that the patient may have. The orthodontist<br />

and the dentist can work in<br />

conjunction to correct these problems<br />

– such as missing teeth and skeletal<br />

deficiencies – while taking advantage<br />

of the patient’s growth period.<br />

What is an orthodontist?<br />

An orthodontist has completed two<br />

years of additional training after dental<br />

school. Their scope of practice<br />

is limited solely to the movement<br />

of teeth. When most people think<br />

about orthodontics, they think about<br />

bulky metal braces. New offerings<br />

include esthetic options for patients<br />

such as Invisalign treatment – aimed<br />

to recreate your natural smile with<br />

function and beauty in mind.<br />

DR. JUSTIN<br />

KAMMO<br />

SPECIAL TO THE<br />

CHALDEAN NEWS<br />

DR. JOMANA<br />

SHAYOTA<br />

SPECIAL TO THE<br />

CHALDEAN NEWS<br />

A visit to the orthodontist can<br />

help prevent serious oral health problems<br />

by addressing spacing between<br />

teeth, overcrowding, and a misaligned<br />

bite. It is important to have properly<br />

aligned teeth with a stable bite to allow<br />

for better function and hygiene.<br />

Most importantly, an orthodontist<br />

can improve your smile to get you the<br />

confidence boost you need.<br />

In an era when “do-it-yourself” orthodontics<br />

are in abundance, it is imperative<br />

to educate the public on the<br />

importance of monitoring all orthodontics<br />

directly by a professional. This<br />

can ensure that teeth are only being<br />

moved in a healthy environment.<br />

Dental care is very important<br />

General dentists offer comprehensive<br />

dental care to patients of all<br />

ages, ranging from preventative care<br />

to aesthetic dentistry and facial aesthetics.<br />

In both children and adults,<br />

dentists address common issues such<br />

as cavities, broken or missing teeth,<br />

and cosmetic concerns. Some have<br />

introduced cosmetic dentistry and<br />

facial aesthetics, such as Botox and<br />

filler, into their practice to help patients<br />

both look and feel their best.<br />

Collaborative efforts between an<br />

orthodontist and dentist are often<br />

the main factor in comprehensive<br />

cosmetic cases. Often times, neither<br />

orthodontics or cosmetic veneers<br />

alone create the result that a provider<br />

and patient are satisfied with. Rather,<br />

the combination of the two creates a<br />

seamless and esthetic outcome.<br />

It is imperative to see a dentist<br />

regularly to maintain a healthy<br />

mouth. A dentist is trained to diagnose<br />

decay but also to recognize its<br />

effect on your overall health. Many<br />

people neglect their oral health, either<br />

due to lack of finances or lack<br />

of prioritizing. However, more often<br />

than that, patients’ fear of the dentist<br />

can cause long lapses in care. By<br />

providing a positive and comforting<br />

environment, dentists gain the trust<br />

of their patients and instill confidence<br />

that quality pain-free care will be provided.<br />

Dr. Justin Kammo (Orthdontist)<br />

and Dr. Jomana Shayota (Dentist)<br />

provide comprehensive dental and<br />

orthodontic care at Dental House and<br />

Aesthetics. Their office is located at<br />

32749 Franklin Road, Suite 200,<br />

in downtown Franklin. They can be<br />

reached at (248) 973-8102.<br />

Exclusively at<br />

Ruth Sinawi<br />

Design Consultant | Novi | 248-504-4233<br />

At GW Design Studio, we’re dedicated to helping you create your dream home<br />

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Our Design Consultants are dedicated to bringing your vision to life.<br />

Visit any GW Design Studio location for a complimentary consultation,<br />

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38 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 39


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40 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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COVID continued from page 21<br />

cost-effective for his current tenants<br />

to stay put, rather than move<br />

to other accommodations.<br />

Najor said his banquet hall, Regency<br />

Manor in Southfield, got “decimated.”<br />

Not just on labor issues, but<br />

suppliers have labor problems, which<br />

translate to increased costs. Suppliers<br />

have to pay higher wages and pass it on.<br />

For example, he said, beef tenderloin<br />

went from $10 a pound to $18<br />

a pound. Chicken breasts went from<br />

$1.92 per pound to $2.62 a pound, an<br />

over 30% increase.<br />

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Some COVID effects<br />

Twitter: @ChaldeanChamber<br />

are here Instagram: to stay @ChaldeanAmericanChamber<br />

Some pandemic-driven changes<br />

will normalize over time as workers<br />

shake off the dust of long layoffs and<br />

rediscover the need for income as<br />

their subsidies evaporate. But other<br />

changes are likely to be long-lasting.<br />

Commercial real estate professional<br />

Kevin Jappaya of KJ Commercial<br />

Real Estate said the Zoom<br />

meeting trend accelerated by the<br />

pandemic was trending up before<br />

COVID set in and is likely to stay as<br />

part of the mix. He thinks changes<br />

in office space needs will also endure.<br />

“There is no<br />

argument that<br />

the demand for<br />

office space has<br />

softened. In addition,<br />

we have<br />

seen a large increase<br />

in companies<br />

sub-leasing<br />

Kevin Jappaya<br />

their space. Some<br />

companies have<br />

found this is a cost savings event…<br />

removing the lease line item of their<br />

income statement.<br />

“On the other hand,” he said, “we<br />

have seen many companies review<br />

their layouts and office flow to provide<br />

a better experience and, in many<br />

cases, tenants have expanded due to<br />

this. I also believe that many employers<br />

will realize that in most cases, inperson<br />

work is more productive than<br />

work from home and the demand for<br />

office space will come back. It will<br />

take time for this to happen.”<br />

Whatever shape the business<br />

world takes as we move from <strong>2021</strong><br />

into 2022, it seems clear there will<br />

be less getting ‘back to normal’ and<br />

more adapting to the ‘new normal’ as<br />

businesses adapt to a changed environment.<br />

<strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong> CHALDEAN NEWS 41


events<br />

18th Annual Golf Outing<br />

Clockwise<br />

from top left:<br />

1. The two<br />

finalists for the<br />

putting contest<br />

ended up tying;<br />

both donated<br />

their winnings<br />

to the CCF.<br />

2. The delicious<br />

dinner in<br />

Shenandoah’s<br />

ballroom was<br />

sponsored<br />

by Ascension<br />

Michigan<br />

3. Lunch on<br />

the patio was<br />

sponsored<br />

by Harvest/<br />

Sherwood Foods<br />

4. The <strong>2021</strong><br />

winners of the<br />

coveted Chaldean<br />

Cup, from left:<br />

Hani Kassab,<br />

Sam Yono II,<br />

Raad Kello, and<br />

Jonathan Kello.<br />

PHOTOS BY DANY ASHAKA<br />

The Chaldean American Chamber hosted the 18th Annual Golf Outing<br />

at Shenandoah Country Club on June 17. It was a full round of golf for<br />

144 golfers, preceded by lunch and followed by a cocktail hour, dinner and<br />

awards. The weather was perfect. Special thanks to presenting sponsor<br />

MotorCity Casino + Hotel, dinner sponsor Ascension Michigan, cocktail<br />

hour sponsor U.S. Ice and lunch sponsor Sherwood/Harvest Foods.<br />

Scotch & Cigars PAC Event<br />

PHOTOS BY DANY ASHAKA<br />

The Chamber PAC is back in action, with a Scotch & Cigars fundraiser<br />

on June 23 hosted at the home of Johny and Leila Kello on Wing Lake.<br />

Attendees had the opportunity to meet with many dignitaries, including<br />

Attorney General Dana Nessel, Senators John Bizon, Michael MacDonald,<br />

Aric Nesbitt, Jim Runestad, Wayne Schmidt, Curt Vanderwall, and Roger<br />

Victory; Mayor Ken Siver of Southfield and Mayor Michael Taylor of<br />

Sterling Heights; Macomb County Prosecutor Pete Lucido; Oakland County<br />

Prosecutor Karen McDonald; Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter,<br />

Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel, Judges Diane D’Agostini and<br />

Debra Nance, and Representatives John Damoose and Matt Hall.<br />

Clockwise from left: 1. Attorney General Dana Nessel shakes hands as<br />

Chamber president Martin Manna looks on. 2. The private PAC event was well<br />

attended, and everyone seemed to have a great time. 3. Dignitaries had the<br />

opportunity to network with each other as well, as evidenced by this photo<br />

of (l to r) Macomb County Prosecutor Peter Lucido, Senator Jim Runestad<br />

and Oakland County Executive Dave Coulter. 4. From left: Macomb County<br />

Executive Mark Hackel, Matthew Scheider, host Johny Kello, and Nick Gorga.<br />

42 CHALDEAN NEWS <strong>JULY</strong> <strong>2021</strong>


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