get these nets
Veteran
With that said, I give a massive shout out to Arab and Black women in the area. No one has done more to try and tie the rifts between our communities than them. I've never seen more dinners, talks, meet-ups and the sort organized by women specifically with the objective of interracial and interfaith cooperation its beautiful.
Also, these adversarial relationships don't really occur in professional/educational settings. However, you have a LARGE under-educated cohorts of both Black men and Arab men...that when they meet there's friction. Especially considering Arab small business owners were given an economic cheat code and can pass them down to those under-educated sons.
This is very important. There IS resentment in our communities about the stifling of our self-determination. But Arab folks aren't the enemy because they were given the preferential treatment...its the system that allowed them that treatment in the first place.
I agree with most of what you said except for the parts I highlighted. I am not from Detroit so cannot speak about that region. I think that attitudes about race permeate entire cultures though, all classes.
Educated people from Middle East hold the same views about African people as those of other classes. Difference is that they are not interacting with Blacks from the merchant to customer relationship. Blacks that well educated Arabs deal with are on equal footing, so they not in dominant position when dealing with them.
Arab views toward Africans have developed over centuries and predate them coming to America.

how anyone can try and make a life there is beyond me 