Abbas Alawieh's grandmother is 91. Her home in Lebanon was just destroyed by the Israeli military. She has been displaced before. When Abbas was 15, he sheltered in a basement in South Lebanon while American-made bombs shook the walls.
Now he watches from Dearborn as it happens again. He is far from alone. Families across metro Detroit with roots in Lebanon, Gaza, Iran, and across the Middle East are living with the same weight — war unfolding in the places they come from, grief carried in living rooms and group chats and middle-of-the-night phone calls, most of it invisible to the broader public.
Abbas, a candidate for Michigan's Senate, has a microphone. Most of his neighbors do not. The Metro's Robyn Vincent talks with him about what that responsibility feels like, the fractures inside the Arab American community, and what goes unheard when a community grieves in silence.
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