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Michigan hosts the largest population of Arab Americans in the country, and Dearborn is home to the country’s only Arab American History Museum. (flowertiare/Adobe Stock)

This story was originally published by Public News Service.

By Farah Siddiqi, producer

Public News Service

April 12, 2024

Until recently, many Americans of Middle Eastern or North African descent were categorized as “white” in government surveys, making it challenging to accurately quantify this population and assess its unique needs. But that is changing.

According to the Office of Management and Budget, the new category of “Middle Eastern and North African” or MENA aims to improve the quality of federal data on race and ethnicity.

Dearborn, Michigan, Mayor Abdullah Hammoud said it will be crucial for better understanding the diverse impacts on individuals, programs and services for people of the Arab community.

“We have been an integral part of the state since migration to the U.S. in the early 1800s in search for a destination that would better provide political, economic and religious freedom,” he said. “And this month presents an opportunity to further build bridges between communities, and to shatter misconceived notions and stereotypes.”

President Joe Biden highlighted the changes during his Arab American Heritage Month announcement, which is observed in April. He noted the addition of the new category for the 2030 Census and other forms, and emphasized its importance for better representation and policymaking.

These updates come amid criticism over Biden’s handling of the Gaza conflict and efforts to appeal to Arab American voters.

Dearborn native Maya Berry, executive director of the Arab American Institute, said it’s important that people of Middle Eastern and North African descent have an opportunity to be counted.

“One of the most deeply impactful ways that it’s been negative,” Berry said, “is that it views our communities as this existential ‘other’- continuously foreign or ‘otherized’ in a way that’s just not consistent with the history of our country, given we’re all immigrants to this wonderful nation.”

Until now, Berry said, Arab Americans were categorized the same as individuals of European descent — a policy that could be seen as erasing their identity and overlooking the discrimination they have encountered.

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