Article by: ALLIE SHAH , Star Tribune
In the wake of prostitution charges involving underage Somali girls,
adults are worried about the pressures many girls face in Minneapolis'
Somali community.
A teenage Somali girl talked about the familial pressures facing girls like her and how that sometimes leads to big trouble. |
When Mohamed Barre heard the disturbing news about
prostitution involving gangs and young Somali girls, his thoughts quickly
turned to his daughters.
"They are lovely, American," he said softly of
the 5-year-old twins, just starting to venture out into the world. "I'm
really so worried."
Prostitution is a worst-case scenario. But in the wake of
federal charges against 29 people accused of selling underage girls for sex,
Somali parents and youth workers are getting more worried about the pressures
facing girls.
Already fighting an internal war to hold on to their
cultural identity in a new country, they can face situations at home far more
tense than the usual mother-daughter conflicts. Some arrived here without their
mothers but in the care of aunts, cousins and older sisters. Some resent the
control of their surrogate parents. Others are treated more like servants than
daughters. Programs to support Somali girls are so scarce that once away from
home, they can quickly find trouble.
"This issue is bigger than that case," said
Abdirahman Mukhtar, youth program manager at the Brian Coyle Community Center.
"It's a youth crisis within the new immigrants."
Minnesota is home to an estimated 70,000 Somalis -- the
largest Somali concentration in the country.
Generally speaking, Somali girls growing up in America
are thriving. In the culture, parents often take a more protective attitude
toward girls, believing that their reputation upholds the dignity of the
family.
"Mothers and fathers keep more of an eye on them
than the boys. It means most of them turn out well," said Saeed Fahia,
executive director of the Confederation of Somali Community in Minnesota, who
noted the large number of girls graduating from high school and attending
college. "This parent obsession of preserving the purity of their
daughters and the well-being of their daughters helps a lot."
But some girls aren't handling the pressure as well.
Caught between two worlds, they rebel against their
household rules. Some cut classes and fall behind in school. Others stay out
late, smoking pot and drinking alcohol. All too often, some girls run away.
With no place to stay, they are easy prey for gang
members and others willing to give them shelter. The federal case involves
young girls who ran away and allegedly were forced into prostitution.
Family secret
Hidden behind many mother-daughter rifts is a family
secret dating back to their escape from Somalia's civil war: A girl's
"mother" is often not her biological mom.
She may be an aunt or an older sister or a cousin.
As the girls come of age, they resent the strict rules
set down by the mother figure and fights ensue.
"A lot of people came to this country with distant
relatives," Fahia said. "The kids are not with their proper family.
They rebel against their distant family and they might turn to these other
young men and women to have that kind of support."
In other cases, the girls are not so much rebelling as
escaping. Forced to cook, clean and baby-sit while their friends go to football
games or to the mall, they run away.
Lives come undone
Fartun Ahmed, 20, has heard their stories.
The youth director at a local mosque, she was recently
approached by a high school counselor about mentoring troubled Somali-American
girls.
"She said, 'I'm having a big problem. I'm dealing
with Somali girls who are running away, Somali girls who are not wanting to go
to their houses. Somali girls whose parents won't let them stay after
school,'" Ahmed said.
"She was saying the parents are forcing them to
leave because they're basically house maids."
The counselor told her the girls confided that they were
not living with their real parents.
It made Ahmed think of one of her dear childhood friends
whose life spiraled downward.
When the girl first arrived in America, she was an
elementary school kid dressed like an older, married Somali woman -- her body
cloaked in an oversized hijab.
She lived with her much older sister, who controlled the
girl's every move, Ahmed said. The girl would have to come home from school and
take care of her sister's five children. When Ahmed would call the house asking
to speak with her friend, the sister would swear into the phone and hang up.
When the girl became a teenager, she started to run away
and went down a bad road. She slept at different guys' houses. She started
wearing revealing clothes that were indecent by anyone's standards, Ahmed said.
By the 10th grade, the girl was failing her classes.
"Being in that kind of life had such a bad impact on
her," Ahmed said.
A Somali teen who did not want to be named said she's
known several friends who have run away, including one who came to stay with her
until she resolved the issues with her mom. Although she is a college-bound
high school senior and says she has a good relationship with her own mother,
she can relate to the pressures that drive girls to bolt.
Her own mother expects her to be home by 9 p.m. and used
to think her after-school activities were a waste of time.
Once they got into an argument and her mother told her to
get out.
"Fine, I'll leave," said the girl.
She headed to an aunt's house nearby and stayed there for
two days before the two made peace and the girl returned.
Lacking youth programs
To Fatimah Hussein, the problems Somali girls face are a
reflection of a larger issue -- a lack of programs for Somali youth, and
especially for girls.
"The problem is there are no activities for the
girls," said Hussein, the youth and girls program coordinator for the
Confederation of Somali Community in Minnesota.
Although as many as 40 percent of the 70,000 Somalis
living in Minnesota are 18 years old or younger, there are only a handful of
programs for girls, she said.
She takes a group of young women living in the
Cedar-Riverside neighborhood of Minneapolis to a nearby gym to play basketball
a couple nights a week. A graduate student at St. Mary's University, she also
runs an after-school tutoring program.
Hussein dreams of a day when she can add a safe zone or a
shelter for Somali girls who are having problems at home. It would be a place
where they could just chill for a while, free from the judgment of others.
"Girls who are in the most danger are the ones who
run away," she said.
Hussein grew up under the watchful eye of a father who
would show up at her school without warning to check up on her and her sister.
She said that she could always talk to her parents about issues.
Parents and teens often clash because parents are
clinging to old ways of raising children, she said. They need to develop new
skills to communicate with their children.
"Instead of just telling the kids this is wrong, they
need to ask them how was school and learn to talk to them," she said.
Stories of girls running away from home are known in the
community, but the allegations of prostitution with underage girls have left
many shaken.
"No one ever thought that things like this could
happen," Barre said, his thoughts returning to his daughters. "I hope
I live long enough ... until they can say, 'Yes, Daddy, from now on we can
defend ourselves. You taught us what's good and bad, and you protected us, and
now we continue.'"
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