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Thread: Regarding Lewiston, Maine

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    Default Regarding Lewiston, Maine

    Lewiston, Maine is an American town that, for some reason, a certain segment of Finns keeps a keen eye on. Here's some news from the place from the last couple of years. Please add your own if you have any.



    The Refugees Who Saved Lewiston

    A dying Maine mill town gets a fresh burst of energy


    By Jesse Ellison

    Barely a decade ago, Lewiston, Maine, was dying. The once bustling mill town's population had been shrinking since the 1970s; most jobs had vanished long before, and residents (those who hadn't already fled) called the decaying center of town "the combat zone."

    That was before a family of Somali refugees discovered Lewiston in 2001 and began spreading the word to immigrant friends and relatives that housing was cheap and it looked like a good place to build new lives and raise children in peace. Since then, the place has been transformed. Per capita income has soared, and crime rates have dropped. In 2004, Inc. magazine named Lewiston one of the best places to do business in America, and in 2007, it was named an "All-America City" by the National Civic League, the first time any town in Maine had received that honor in roughly 40 years. "No one could have dreamed this," says Chip Morrison, the local Chamber of Commerce president. "Not even me, and I'm an optimist."

    Immigrants from Somalia may sound like improbable rescuers for a place like Lewiston. Maine is one of the whitest states in the country, second only to Vermont, and its old families have a reputation for distinct chilliness toward "outsiders." And many of the immigrants spoke no English at all when they arrived. But even beyond the obvious racial, cultural and religious differences between the Muslim newcomers and the locals, the town's image had become so negative that it was hard to imagine people choosing to move there. "Nothing could have rightfully prepared them," says Paul Badeau of the Lewiston-Auburn Economic Growth Council. "And nothing could have rightfully prepared us, either." It wasn't easy at first. Townspeople feared for the few jobs that remained in the area, and they warned that the strangers would overload local social services. In 2002, the then Mayor Laurier Raymond wrote an open letter to the Somali community begging them to stop encouraging friends and family to follow them to Maine.

    But the Somalis kept coming, followed by Sudanese, Congolese and other Africans. By some estimates, 4,000 new immigrants have moved to Lewiston since 2001, and dozens are still arriving every month. Eight years ago, the town's adult-education center had only 76 students learning English as a second language. Now some 950 pass through every year. "This is just the teeniest little part of what has happened to the city," says the center's coordinator, Anne Kemper. "Everybody has had to scramble." Today, Somali women and children in donated winter parkas carefully navigate the snowbanks in the town's formerly crime-ridden low-income residential area.

    The center of town still has pawnbrokers and bars, but now there are also shops with names like Mogadishu and Baracka, with signs advertising halal foods and selling headscarves and prepaid African phone cards. "Generally, refugees or migrants that come into a town give a new injection of energy," says Karen Jacobsen, director of the Forced Migration Program at Tufts University's Feinstein International Famine Center. "Somalis particularly. They have a very good network [with strong] trading links, and new economic activities they bring with them." Retailers sell clothes and spices imported from Africa; other entrepreneurs have launched restaurants and small businesses providing translation services, in-home care for the elderly and other social services. There's even a business consultant. "Increasingly, there's an acceptance that immigration is associated with good economic growth," says urban-studies specialist Richard Florida, director of the University of Toronto's Martin Prosperity Institute. "How is Maine going to grow? It's a big state with a sparse population. One of the ways to grow quickly is import people."

    Commerce isn't all the Somalis are reshaping. Maine has America's highest median age and the lowest percentage of residents under 18. Throughout the 1990s, the state's population of 20- to 30-year-olds fell an average of 3,000 a year. Demographers predict that by 2030, the state will have only two workers for each retiree. "In many small Maine towns they're looking at having to close schools for lack of schoolchildren," says State Economist Catherine Reilly. "It will snowball. Right now we're seeing the difficulty of keeping some schools open; in 10 or 15 years that's going to be the difficulty of businesses finding workers." The same ominous trend is seen in other states with similarly homogenous demographics and low numbers of foreign-born residents—states like Montana, North Dakota and West Virginia. Reilly adds: "If you told a demographer just our racial composition, they would be able to guess that we're an old state with a low birthrate."

    Lewiston's sudden jolt is reflected even in enrollment at local universities. Although University of Maine enrollment has dropped systemwide since 2002, the student population at its Lewiston campus jumped 16 percent between 2002 and 2007. And Andover College, which opened a campus in Lewiston in 2004, had to start expanding almost immediately to accommodate a boom in applications. Enrollment doubled in two years. The reason? "Young people didn't want to go to a place that's all white," says Morrison. Practically everyone in Lewiston credits the Somalis' discovery of their town with much of its newfound success. "It's been an absolute blessing in many ways," says Badeau. "Just to have an infusion of diversity, an infusion of culture and of youth. Cultural diversity was the missing piece." The question is whether the rest of Maine—and other states like it—can find their own missing pieces.

    Link.

    [YOUTUBE]H0g-h_aL458[/YOUTUBE]

    And, as always, some white male bigot didn't appreciate the endless riches the Somalis brought to Lewiston:

    [YOUTUBE]k5w33b0SwFM[/YOUTUBE]
    Last edited by Eldritch; 07-01-2010 at 01:00 AM.

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    "Just to have an infusion of diversity, an infusion of culture and of youth. Cultural diversity was the missing piece."


    That was all that was missing. Just seed Somalis all over the world and this world wide recession is over.


    Diversity of diversity's sake! Yipee.



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    Wink

    Actually, the economic mini-revival of Lewiston in the early 00's happened despite the Somalis coming there, not because of it.

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    Do Finns really watch the news of Lewsiton, ME?

    Anyway, it is, and has been, a crappy old mill town for a long time. The neighboring town across the Androscoggin River is called Auburn (another run-down old mill town). Collectively, the area is known as LA.

    People speak of getting drunk, "Lewiston style".

    Early in its history, it was just another English/Yankee town in New England, but manufacturing took hold in the mid-1800s and it was transformed to a great extent:

    Lewiston's population boomed in the 19th century. In 1849 the railroad came to Lewiston. With it came a significant amount of Irish workers moving into the city to help build the canals and mills. During the Civil War, high demand for textiles provided Lewiston with a strong industrial base. Starting in the 1870s, railroad connections to Canada brought an even more significant influx of French-Canadian millworkers, replacing the former "yankee millgirls", and the city's population has been largely Franco-American since. The Franco-Americans settled in an area downtown that became known as "Little Canada". From 1840 to 1890, Lewiston's population exploded from 1,801 to 21,701. During this time, in 1863, Lewiston was incorporated as a city.
    I've certainly always thought of that area, and all the old mill towns in New England (Berlin, Manchester & Nashua in New Hampshire, Lawrence & Lowell in Massachussetts, to name a few) as being very French-Canadian.

    And here's some stuff about what's being going on since Africans started showing up there:

    In 1999, at the urging of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), the United States government began preparations to resettle an estimated 12,000 refugees from the Bantu minority ethnic group in Somalia to select cities throughout the United States. Most of the early arrivals in the United States settled in Clarkston, Georgia, a city adjacent to Atlanta, but the latter contend that they encountered problems there with local criminals.[2]

    Word soon spread that a small town in Maine by the name of Lewiston had a low crime rate, good schools and cheap housing, and even reached as far as the refugee camps in Kenya.[3] Somalis subsequently began trickling in to the former mill town, soon followed en masse by hundreds of Bantus over a period of just a few months.[2]

    In 2006, it was estimated that well over 50% of Somali immigrant adults were still unemployed, even after five years from their arrival in Lewiston as reported by William Finnegan of New Yorker Magazine[4]. A 2008 report by the State of Maine's Department of Labor confirmed the anecdote showing unemployment at 51%.[5]

    In October 2002, then-Mayor Laurier T. Raymond wrote an open letter addressed to leaders of the Somali community, predicting a negative impact on the city's social services and requesting that they discourage further relocation to Lewiston. The letter angered some people and prompted some community leaders and residents to speak out against the mayor, drawing national attention. Demonstrations were held in Lewiston, both by those who supported the Bantus' presence and those who opposed it.[2]

    In January 2003, a small white supremacist group demonstrated in Lewiston in support of what they believed the mayor meant, prompting a simultaneous counter-demonstration of about 4,000 people at Bates College and the organization of the "Many and One Coalition". Only 32 attended the rally by the white supremacist group. The Mayor was out of state on the day of the rallies, while the governor and other dignitaries attended.

    In 2006, a frozen severed pig's head was thrown into a Lewiston mosque while the faithful were praying. This was considered very offensive by the town's Muslim community, as swine is viewed as unclean in Islam and eating pork is prohibited.[6] The culprit admitted to the act and claimed it to be a joke. He later committed suicide.[7]

    The 2010 Census should reveal some interesting stats on ol' Lewiston when the numers start to trickle out.

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    LOL @ the 'University of Southern Maine' advertisment between posts--never thought I'd see that on TA.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Allenson View Post
    Do Finns really watch the news of Lewsiton, ME?
    I do have a degree of interest in the place. And so do other Finns. Try putting this through Google Translate.

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    In 1999, at the urging of the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), the United States government began preparations to resettle an estimated 12,000 refugees from the Bantu minority ethnic group in Somalia to select cities throughout the United States.
    I've witnessed some Somalis in Finland tap into the "slavery victim complex". The irony is that they still had slaves (the Bantus) up till about a hundred years ago, and it was the Italian colonial administration that abolished the slave trade in the area.

    /off-topic.
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    As an old Johnny Rebel song once sung:

    Nigger, nigger- tell them lies.....

    The Deep Ones (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_One) will have new breeding stock then- and'll be darker, uglier, and eating more halal food then ever as compared to eating just chum.

    Way to go Maine, trade your Anglo-French heritage for that of the African ummah!

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    Default "Small Town America Transformed by Somali Migrants"

    Last edited by Smaland; 07-17-2010 at 01:20 AM. Reason: Correction
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    4,000 I'd say, the population of this town in Maine isn't even 40,000 in toto.

    The population was 38,000 at the 2007 census.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewiston,_Maine

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