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Pathways To Success: Conversations With Community Leaders
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5 المشاهدات·
25/09/27
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Pathways To Success: Conversations With Community Leaders
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Transcript
[0:00]In a time where many are against us, sister Duna's drive to
[0:04]succeed and Haj Musa Hanka's commitment to the youth.
[0:07]I want to thank them for for again proving their commitment to
[0:10]the community by showing up tonight and inshallah inspire and guide our
[0:13]youth to excel beyond all bounds.
[0:14]Let's give them three loud salawat.
[0:31]Now I briefly mentioned our speakers but I think it's important to
[0:35]discuss each individual speaker in a bit more detail for those who
[0:37]may not be aware of their stories.
[0:38]So we'll start with sister Duna.
[0:40]Let us begin with sister Dunya Bezi.
[0:42]She is the founding partner and CEO of ATLAW, one of Michigan's
[0:47]fastest growing law firms.
[0:47]She began her career in personal injury law and has since expanded
[0:50]her practice into civil litigation, business, tax, real estate, and immigration law.
[0:57]Recognized among the top 10 under 40 personal injury attorneys, Duna is
[1:00]not only a strong advocate for her clients, but also a leader
[1:03]in innovating how law firms operate.
[1:04]She continues to inspire young professionals through her vision, resilience, and commitment
[1:11]to justice.
[1:09]Let us welcome her with a loud salawat.
[1:15]Muhammad.
[1:16]Next we have our dear brother Sam Abis.
[1:19]He is the CEO of Brone Mod Modern Eyer and a a
[1:24]restaurant brand that combines fresh sustainable food with modern design and community
[1:29]spirit aka my favorite restaurant.
[1:30]Born and raised in Dearbornne, Sam's entrepreneurial journey reflects his deep commitment
[1:35]to the city.
[1:37]Since opening the first Bome in 2015, he has expanded into new
[1:39]concepts and projects including Yogurttopia, the Great Commoner, and others.
[1:43]Through his work, Sam aims to showcase Dearbornne as a hub of
[1:46]innovation, culture, and hospitality.
[1:48]Again, let's welcome him with a loud salawat.
[1:56]>> We also have a longtime NYC supporter, Dr.
[1:59]Ali Nullah.
[2:01]Dr.
[2:00]is a board-certified family medicine physician at the family doc clinic in
[2:03]Dearbornne Heights.
[2:06]After earning his medical degree from the University of Michigan Medical School
[2:10]and completing his residency at Corwell Health Wayne Hospital, Dr.
[2:16]Nola chose to practice in his own community.
[2:16]He cares for patients of all ages from children to seniors offering
[2:22]both primary and urgent care.
[2:23]Dr.
[2:24]Nisallah believes in building healthier families and stronger communities.
[2:27]He also started the muharam initiative if you haven't heard which is
[2:30]a way to provide health care for those in need around the
[2:32]community in honor of Allah subhana tala and Im Hussein.
[2:36]His initiative inspired many other clinicians and phys clinics and physicians to
[2:40]follow in his footsteps and contribute to this beautiful cause.
[2:43]Let's give Dr.
[2:46]a very loud salawat.
[2:51]>> Next is a dear brother of mine and a voice of
[2:54]the people state repabis forhead.
[2:55]Mr.
[2:56]Far serves as a Michigan state representative for the third district representing
[3:00]Dearborn and parts of Detroit.
[3:02]A proud son of immigrants, Alabis earned a degree in public health
[3:05]from the University of Michigan Dearborn and is pursuing a master of
[3:10]public policy from U of M and Arbor.
[3:12]But go green always.
[3:12]His journey in public service began early uh working on campaigns and
[3:17]in local government before running for office himself.
[3:19]Today he champions policies that strengthen working families, expand opportunity, and uplift
[3:24]his community.
[3:25]I want to thank you for your commitment to serving our community
[3:28]on the state level.
[3:30]Please join me in welcoming him with a loud salawat.
[3:37]>> Last but not least, we have Assistant Superintendent Haj Musa Hama
[3:41]with more than two decades of service in public education.
[3:43]Haj Musa has dedicated his career to advancing student achievement and supporting
[3:49]educators across metropolitan Detroit.
[3:50]He began his career as a mathematics teacher in West Bloomfield schools
[3:55]before transitioning into educational leadership.
[3:57]For over 10 years, Mr.
[3:58]Habka served as a principal of Gross Point South High School where
[4:01]he guided the school to numerous distinctions, including recognition as the fourth
[4:06]ranked traditional high school in Michigan and one of the nation's top
[4:09]secondary schools.
[4:10]A hallmark of his tenure was a deep commitment to character education,
[4:13]helping students with reflection, act with compassion, and perform with honor.
[4:18]Under his leadership, South embraced the belief that it is not sufficient
[4:23]for students to aspire to be the best in the world.
[4:24]Rather, they must strive to be the best in the world.
[4:28]He now serves as the assistant superintendent of human resources for Gross
[4:32]Point Public Schools, where he provides strategic leadership in recruiting, developing, and
[4:36]supporting exceptional staff.
[4:39]In addition, he is an adjunct professor of mathematics at Henry Ford
[4:43]College, where he continues to share his passion for teaching and learning.
[4:46]Mr.
[4:47]Hama is deeply committed to cultivating inclusive cultures and school environments that
[4:52]promote excellence, foster belonging, and empower students to realize their full potential.
[5:00]Let's give Haj Musa Hama a very loud salawat.
[5:04]>> Before we delve into the questions, I want to briefly explain
[5:07]how tonight's program will work.
[5:08]We have a couple general questions that will apply to all panelists
[5:10]in which they will be answering based on their own experiences.
[5:13]However, we want the audience to be involved.
[5:17]So, we will then follow up by asking each panelist their own
[5:20]individual questions based on the questions that you submit when you scan
[5:23]the QR code on the screen.
[5:26]So, let's keep that up there for a minute.
[5:26]Please pull out your phones if you have any questions that you'd
[5:28]like to ask and then submit those questions and inshallah we'll get
[5:32]to them as time permits.
[5:39]>> Panelists, are you all ready?
[5:42]So we'll begin with our first general question.
[5:46]Can you share a little bit about your journey?
[5:48]What led you into your career and some of the experiences that
[5:53]shaped you along the way?
[5:54]Let's start with Sister Duna and we'll work our way down inshallah.
[5:58]It all started when I was six years old when um I
[6:04]used to, you know, defend all of my siblings to my parents
[6:07]and they called me the Muhammad in the family from a very
[6:10]very young age and it stuck.
[6:11]That's what it was for me.
[6:15]Uh there was kind of no um options that that was a
[6:17]straight line path for me.
[6:21]So my journey through school was just that.
[6:24]Um then when I finished law school um I was planning on
[6:28]doing like business transactions or corporate law and my brother got into
[6:32]a a very serious accident.
[6:33]He broke his hip and his ankle on opposite sides.
[6:37]He couldn't walk for like six months and we were in the
[6:40]hospital laying there.
[6:42]My dad was overseas visiting his family for the first time.
[6:45]So I had to make the phone call to him at 4
[6:47]in the morning because it was like all over the news and
[6:50]I didn't want him to hear it from somebody else.
[6:51]Um, and they didn't operate on my brother for four days until
[6:56]they knew the insurance company was going to pay.
[6:57]And the second they knew the insurance company was going to pay,
[7:00]they put us up in a villa suite in the hospital.
[7:03]You could maybe fit 100 people in the room.
[7:04]And I knew right then that both of these things weren't right.
[7:08]Like it wasn't right to treat us like this if the insurance
[7:11]company isn't paying.
[7:13]And it isn't right to treat us like royalty if the insurance
[7:15]company is.
[7:17]And I took that as a sign just it was the pinnacle
[7:19]moment of where I was picking my career path.
[7:22]I was looking for jobs.
[7:24]I had just passed the bar exam.
[7:25]I took that as a sign from Allah to show me that
[7:29]like I need to help and serve these individuals who really don't
[7:32]have a voice in the hospital.
[7:33]They don't have anybody who's fighting for them.
[7:37]And how scary of a moment.
[7:38]I was technically a lawyer at the time and it was very
[7:43]scary for me.
[7:42]So, um, ever since then, I've loved every second of it.
[7:47]I love the courtroom.
[7:47]I love beating up insurance companies.
[7:49]I love advocating for the little guy.
[7:52]And, alhamdulillah, that's what brought me to where I am today.
[7:57]And now, I'm looking to inspire other attorneys to um, find their
[8:03]passion, who are they meant to serve in our career, and be
[8:06]the best possible attorneys they can be, and try to make them
[8:10]better so they can serve the clients in a better way.
[8:11]Thank you.
[8:12]And for those of you who don't know, Sister Duna I believe
[8:16]has correct me if I'm wrong maybe 50 employees at your forum
[8:19]about so there's anybody who could guide us in it'll be her.
[8:23]Um so thank you again for your answer.
[8:26]>> Um I think for me one of the things I I
[8:30]did that was a strength and it worked for me is I
[8:34]followed something I was really good at.
[8:36]I know sometimes people say follow your passions.
[8:39]Uh I was really good at mathematics and I also happen to
[8:42]have a passion for it.
[8:45]Uh and I remember when I was in college specifically there was
[8:48]a professor her name was Dr.
[8:50]Near.
[8:50]I had her for calc one.
[8:51]She was the most amazing teacher I ever had.
[8:54]Uh I actually went through high school did not take mathematics my
[8:58]senior year.
[8:59]Didn't want anything to do with it and it was because I
[9:04]had a really bad experience with a teacher.
[9:06]Uh but when I got to college and I started retaking some
[9:09]of my mathematics courses, her passion just inspired me.
[9:15]I loved her so much.
[9:14]I mean not in past I I I loved her class so
[9:19]much that I took her for calcul 2 and I took her
[9:22]for calcul 3.
[9:21]And at that point I said I'm going to go in a
[9:25]mathematical related field.
[9:26]Uh I tend to be a little more outgoing though.
[9:28]So working in a cubicle as maybe an engineer didn't align with
[9:34]my personality.
[9:33]So I guess you have to also know yourself.
[9:36]So my strength was mathematics.
[9:38]I'm a little more outgoing.
[9:43]Figured I'm also talkative.
[9:43]So uh teaching was a a way to go.
[9:47]But I also, you know, the big belief especially for our community.
[9:52]I I believe that the greatest institution that we have in America
[9:57]is public education.
[9:58]I don't know another country where immigrants can come and then their
[10:06]kids become doctors, entrepreneurs, lawyers, educators, right?
[10:10]And so I think as a young kid, you know, my dad
[10:15]always always tell me they can never take your education away from
[10:17]you.
[10:18]And when you work you when you live in a community like
[10:20]ours, you see you can open up a business, but the true
[10:27]pathway to success is education.
[10:27]And it's also for diversification, right?
[10:30]We can't we can't have everyone own a gas station.
[10:33]We also can't have everyone be a doctor.
[10:35]We have to get in a myriad of fields to grow our
[10:39]influence so that way we could advocate for ourselves, so we could
[10:45]lead ourselves.
[10:43]Um so but I guess that's kind of how I got into
[10:49]education just uh a passion something I love.
[10:51]>> Thank you.
[10:52]Haj um just to speak on his commitment to teaching I is
[10:56]Batul here at all is your daughter here if you're there.
[10:58]Batul got a 4.6 GPA.
[11:01]So let's just say teaching in that family is superb.
[11:11]>> You know that is impressive that 4.6 6 GPA.
[11:13]Uh my name is Alabas Far.
[11:17]I have the honor of serving as the state representative for the
[11:21]city of Dearbornne and parts of Detroit.
[11:24]Um my story, you know, I'll say isn't rooted in maybe academic
[11:27]success.
[11:28]I actually wasn't that good at kelk when I took it in
[11:29]high school.
[11:30]Um and uh you know, I actually intentionally avoided it when I
[11:33]got to college.
[11:34]That's why I have a degree in public health.
[11:36]Um, but you know, early on at early age in high school,
[11:39]I was very involved in in groups like uh NYC, the Arab
[11:43]Student Union.
[11:45]And I I really fell in love with the idea of serving
[11:47]my community.
[11:48]This idea that, like you said, only in America does this country
[11:51]and these the the city and the state give you the tools
[11:55]to build the kind of community you want to live in.
[11:57]And for me, at the time, there was a state representative in
[12:00]Dearborn, his name was Abdullah Hammud, and he had came to Fordson
[12:03]during career day.
[12:05]and him and I uh kind of went back and forth on
[12:06]some disagreements and uh he said, "You know what?
[12:09]You're a smart guy.
[12:10]I want you to come intern for me." I said, "Okay, great."
[12:11]But he got to pick me up.
[12:12]I'm 16.
[12:13]I don't have a car.
[12:15]And he did.
[12:15]He picked me up and we actually went to Lancing a few
[12:18]days.
[12:18]And I I really fell in love just seeing the way you
[12:22]can influence change in the state, how you can work in different
[12:25]rooms and meet different people.
[12:26]But I also realized something uh that when Abdullah was meeting many
[12:30]people and and even now to this day when I when I
[12:33]do it uh I would be the first Arab American they would
[12:34]meet most times and that's something that's strange right living in Wayne
[12:38]County living in Metro Detroit uh it's kind of hard but when
[12:43]you're living in Muskegan Heights or Lington uh they don't have the
[12:46]food or the culture or they've never met Arab Americans and so
[12:49]for me it was a new experience of kind of educating people
[12:54]teaching them about Arab culture being a Muslim and what that means
[12:58]and and really battling the stigma.
[12:59]And now more than ever, there is more stigma around being an
[13:03]Arab and being a Muslim.
[13:04]Um, and you know, there's a lot of ways we can approach
[13:05]it, but I think one thing we still see the mayor leading
[13:09]on is is pushing for understanding across culture, across, you know, religious
[13:14]differences.
[13:15]Um, but for me, it started there.
[13:17]I started at a young age in high school, volunteering on campaigns,
[13:20]getting involved, and you know, the heritage of being the son of
[13:23]immigrants is something I carry with me.
[13:25]How do we make it easier for people in my age group
[13:29]to continue calling Michigan home, calling Dearbornne home?
[13:31]How do we make it easier for people that are coming here
[13:33]to find their American dream?
[13:34]There was a time, you know, my parents and many of our
[13:38]parents could have came to this country, got started working a a
[13:40]part-time job or a full-time job somewhere, start their own business, but
[13:43]that dream seems like it's further away every day.
[13:46]And for me, I keep fighting to make sure the next kids,
[13:49]the next generation of people can have those opportunities I had.
[13:51]being seven years outside of high school.
[13:53]I'll tell you I I still go back to Fortson a lot
[13:56]of times.
[13:55]Love Fortson, by the way.
[13:57]I think they're playing Dear One High tonight.
[13:58]So, good luck to them.
[14:00]But, you know, every time I I go into the high school
[14:02]and I and I see the small things I used to have
[14:04]that I took for granted go away slowly.
[14:05]And how do we bring those back?
[14:07]How do we make sure this next generation's up for success and
[14:12]that we are doing everything we absolutely can uh for people in
[14:15]this state and and in Dearbornne?
[14:15]Um and so that's my why.
[14:17]That's kind of what drives me every day is just this idea
[14:20]that here in this country we can build the society we ought
[14:23]to live in.
[14:24]We can bring our values to the front and that's something I
[14:26]I take very seriously and something I drives me every single day.
[14:30]>> Thank you.
[14:32]And uh just a quick note, Alabis was actually nomin Michigan's independent
[14:36]um MS, right?
[14:38]Is it miss?
[14:38]Yeah, MS.
[14:39]So um he really is committed to the community and we thank
[14:43]you brother Sam.
[14:44]Thank you.
[14:50]So kind of hearing uh Haj Musa, it it brought back a
[14:56]lot of memories because I was really good at math and I
[15:00]was on a pathway to be an engineer.
[15:04]I finished calcul 1, calc 2, calcul 3, differential equations, etc., etc.
[15:08]I looked around and I realized I'm a lot more social of
[15:11]a person and I don't think that I could sit in a
[15:18]cubicle.
[15:16]And I loved business, but every time I'd ask my parents, I
[15:21]said, you know, I want to go into business, first thing my
[15:25]mom would do was shut it down instantly.
[15:26]Don't even think about it.
[15:28]You're going to be a doctor, a lawyer, or an engineer.
[15:29]And she's sitting there in the audience right now looking at me,
[15:36]but it's the truth.
[15:35]And so I kept on and I decided, okay, if I can't
[15:40]do if I can't do that, then I'll push on to economics,
[15:42]maybe accounting, figure something out there.
[15:44]In the end, I found myself back with that entrepreneurial spirit, opening
[15:51]businesses one after the other and continuing to push on.
[15:57]And opening businesses is is not as easy or as glorified as
[16:01]it may seem.
[16:03]there are a lot of ups and downs and and that's the
[16:06]uh the grit that you you have to have in order to
[16:10]continue on with it.
[16:12]The one thing that I would say to the youth is although
[16:14]it's nice to say you own a business or to go into
[16:17]business or to aspire to be a business owner entrepreneur the best
[16:21]thing that you can do is root yourself in education the way
[16:25]that uh Haj Musa was was mentioning before with education it's like
[16:29]your insurance policy and you give yourself that foundation where you can
[16:35]always fall back and that was the those words resonate in my
[16:38]head since I was a child you you know, with my mom
[16:42]and my dad always telling me, "If you want to go into
[16:44]business, that's fine, but give yourself an insurance policy just in case
[16:49]it didn't work out." And when my first business failed, my parents
[16:55]said, "Well, you still have your education." And I said, "No, I'm
[16:58]going to keep pushing on." And I continued and I pushed.
[17:00]And after I graduated, I got my MBA.
[17:03]That still didn't make my parents happy.
[17:05]So, I pushed on and I got my CPA.
[17:08]And finally they said, "Okay, that's that's good.
[17:11]We'd love for you to push on to get a PhD." I
[17:15]said, "This is where I, you know, I kind of say, "No,
[17:18]this is it." You know, this this is where I stop.
[17:19]And and I continue to to uh diversify and go into uh
[17:26]various businesses and real estate and things like that.
[17:27]And it's something that I truly love.
[17:29]And I feel like a lot of times people, you know, they
[17:33]think they're attorneys, but you know, if I had to, if I
[17:36]had to pick what Duna is, she embodies the entrepreneurial spirit.
[17:45]Although she's an attorney, she really is an entrepreneur.
[17:48]Although I'm a CPA, I truly believe that everything about me is
[17:54]an entrepreneur because every time I hit a roadblock, I pivot and
[18:01]I continue to move on and I try to find ways to
[18:02]evolve as a business owner to continue to stay relevant, to continue
[18:08]to stay competitive in the marketplace.
[18:10]So, um, alhamdulillah for everything that I've that that I've encountered and
[18:15]I absolutely have no regrets, although I took the long route.
[18:18]Um, I feel like uh in the end it was it was
[18:22]quite worth it and my why ended up coming coming to fruition.
[18:24]So, alhamdulillah for everything.
[18:26]>> Alhamdulillah.
[18:27]And if we went to the CPA, we would not be getting
[18:29]our uh farmers market salad with chicken on top.
[18:31]But so, thank God it worked out the way it did.
[18:37]Um, >> everybody.
[18:38]>> So, funny story is I took calc with Haj Musa when
[18:42]I was in high school as dual enrollment.
[18:44]It was a hard class.
[18:48]And although I loved math, I wasn't that good at it.
[18:51]Uh but he was an excellent teacher and uh an excellent role
[18:56]model for a lot of us youth.
[18:57]And thank you, Hush, for everything you did.
[19:00]And thank you everybody here.
[19:00]Um growing up, I loved science, right?
[19:03]I was a nerd.
[19:06]I'm still a big nerd.
[19:06]Uh and I've always loved people.
[19:08]I've always loved meeting people and talking to people and learning from
[19:12]others.
[19:13]And like everybody here, I had important people in my life.
[19:16]And I was actually blessed to have a lot of those people
[19:20]who who who guided me and uh you know like a lot
[19:24]of you too my parents didn't go to college you know uh
[19:26]some of them you know my dad didn't go to high school
[19:29]but they worked hard and they were honest and they taught me
[19:34]the importance of uh remembering Allah and everything I do as well
[19:38]as you know education like my dad would take me to the
[19:40]smoke shop and he would tell me you want to clean the
[19:44]bathroom or you want to go to college and he'd make me
[19:47]clean the bathroom, make me wipe down the shelves.
[19:48]So, I I learned the business, you know, business through that hard,
[19:52]working hard and being honest.
[19:56]And uh like I said, I was a nerd.
[19:58]Did nerdy things.
[19:58]I still remember when my mom brought me a microscope uh microscope
[20:02]home.
[20:03]And um I I I went through college.
[20:06]Um I had you know as a role model at fortson who
[20:15]pushed me uh to to dream big and to go big.
[20:19]I remember uh I got into Ann Arbor in undergrad and it
[20:21]was a big now it's normal.
[20:23]Everybody's going to these big colleges.
[20:24]Uh but I I had got into Ann Arbor and I wasn't
[20:29]going to go.
[20:30]I didn't tell my parents.
[20:31]I didn't tell anyone.
[20:33]I was afraid of the financial burden and leaving my parents to
[20:36]go to Michigan.
[20:36]And I had a scholarship to Wayne State and I still remember
[20:40]he called me into his office and he's like, "You think I
[20:42]don't know?" He's like, "You have no choice." He called my parents
[20:49]and shipped me to Ann Arbor.
[20:49]And um I just kept working hard and when you become a
[20:52]when you want to become a doctor, you have to sacrifice a
[20:56]lot.
[20:56]People don't always see it, but like I want to be really
[20:58]good at it, you sacrifice.
[21:00]You miss birthday parties, you miss holidays, you miss family time, you
[21:05]lose a lot of friends.
[21:05]Uh but at the end of the day, you just work hard
[21:09]and alhamdulillah, I worked really hard.
[21:11]Uh I got into a very good medical school.
[21:12]But for me, it's I always knew that I wanted to come
[21:16]back to my community.
[21:18]And I always uh when I went through med school, I realized,
[21:20]you know, I kept trying to convince myself to become a surgeon,
[21:23]to become a cardiologist.
[21:25]And I kept coming back to the fact that I liked science
[21:28]and I loved medicine, but I also liked community and I also
[21:34]loved meeting people and and uh helping communities and and getting to
[21:37]know other people.
[21:37]And I felt like family medicine was the best route for me
[21:42]at that point.
[21:41]And family medicine, if you don't know, is a is a is
[21:45]a type of doctor, a family doctor that treats people of all
[21:49]ages.
[21:49]Um you're embedded in your community.
[21:51]You can practice any way you want.
[21:53]you there, you know, you practice based on the way you're trained,
[21:56]right?
[21:56]So, you do primary care, but if you pick up extra skills,
[22:01]you can do more stuff.
[22:01]Um, so knowing that, I came back, I did residency in Metro
[22:04]Detroit at a small community hospital.
[22:07]Everyone was like, "What are you doing?
[22:09]You went to Ann Arbor.
[22:11]You're coming to this small hospital.
[22:12]Where is this hospital even at?" But I knew that was going
[22:15]to set me up.
[22:17]So, the lesson for the younger generation is, you know, what you're
[22:21]passionate about.
[22:23]Do that.
[22:22]But also, you kind of sometimes have to silence the noise in
[22:27]the room and do things for the right reason.
[22:30]So, not always chasing that big name, but doing what you think
[22:33]is best for you.
[22:35]So, I came back to this community hospital because I knew it
[22:38]was going to set me up for the long dream that I
[22:42]had, which was to go into uh private practice to open my
[22:44]own clinic.
[22:46]So, I worked really hard in residency.
[22:48]I started preparing.
[22:51]Um, and then straight out of residency, I did what most people
[22:55]don't do is I opened up my own clinic.
[22:57]Um, and the reason I wanted to do that was because I
[22:59]wanted the freedom.
[23:01]I wanted the freedom to say when a patient comes in and
[23:05]they can't afford their medicine or their visit, it's okay.
[23:07]You know, we'll take the we'll take the payment from Allah.
[23:09]And I tell my patients this a lot of times they um
[23:13]they laugh, but if you work for corporate medicine, you can't do
[23:18]that, right?
[23:17]So, uh, there's that freedom in private practice.
[23:20]So, I've been working really hard the last four years at the
[23:23]Family Do Clinic and urgent care.
[23:27]We opened up four years ago.
[23:28]I have an amazing team that has allowed me to do what
[23:30]I do.
[23:31]I have an amazing wife who's supported me throughout.
[23:35]Um, and because of them, we've grown.
[23:37]Uh, we've grown through three clinics now.
[23:39]We have 10 providers.
[23:40]We have, you know, probably over 30 people on staff.
[23:44]And, alhamdulillah, we're growing.
[23:45]And shout out to Shireen if you see her.
[23:48]She's one of my partners in Hemraic and uh she's in the
[23:50]in the audience today.
[23:52]Um so my experiences they haven't been always been easy.
[23:55]Uh but I've been blessed to have people around me uh to
[24:00]guide me and uh to always allow me to remember that at
[24:03]the end of the day our time is limited to enjoy it,
[24:07]give back uh enjoy the pleasures of this life as well in
[24:10]the halal and and always remember to to move forward and work
[24:17]hard.
[24:16]>> Thank you.
[24:17]specific.
[24:18]He mentioned hard work.
[24:19]He mentioned honesty and community.
[24:20]And I think every panelist up here has embodied all of those
[24:24]words to the fullest of extent.
[24:25]So on behalf of the NYC, on behalf of the community, I
[24:27]really want to thank you guys for what you've done.
[24:30]Salah Muhammad Ali Muhammad.
[24:35]>> Inshallah.
[24:36]Now we'll move into asking each panelist their own questions uh respectful
[24:39]respect respectful to their individual fields um from the pool of questions
[24:43]that you have all uploaded.
[24:44]Um, Sister Don, is it okay if we start with you?
[24:47]Okay.
[24:48]If you want, we can go the opposite way.
[24:52]Yala, three minutes works.
[24:54]Let's do it.
[24:54]Sounds good.
[24:56]>> Okay.
[24:59]Um, >> you're awesome.
[25:01]Okay.
[25:01]So one of the questions we have is do you ever feel
[25:06]in the legal world or criminal just sorry let me give me
[25:09]turn off that.
[25:10]So do you ever feel in the legal world or criminal justice
[25:14]system it may intentionally or unintentionally harm the less fortunate recipients of
[25:21]legal power?
[25:20]Can we as Muslims prevent this in the criminal justice system?
[25:28]100%.
[25:30]Um there are innate issues with the system itself like the system
[25:39]they say the system is broken the system is really broken.
[25:44]Um, I think first, uh, people of, um, that don't speak the
[25:49]language have the toughest time in the system.
[25:51]And a lot of times they don't have, uh, attorneys or advocates
[25:54]who also speak their same language or they're going outside of the
[25:58]community for attorneys because that's what they've been told to do their
[26:05]whole life, like go outside the community.
[26:07]But then that attorney doesn't understand their language and they have a
[26:11]very very tough time navigating the system and getting the facts right.
[26:15]So I think um there are safeguards you could put in place
[26:19]in order to protect yourself against the innate issues that live within
[26:25]the system itself.
[26:27]Um, and I think that that's a big part of why we
[26:28]do what we do and why I've been trying to build a
[26:33]team of attorneys who can specialize in every single area of law
[26:36]because it's not just one area of law that has a defect
[26:41]within the system or, you know, people of um that don't have
[26:44]the ability to pay for legal services.
[26:47]Uh, they can't, you know, they don't know how to navigate it.
[26:52]They don't have any attorneys in their circles.
[26:55]They don't know who to go to.
[26:56]So trying to get the word out that we are here, we're
[26:58]here to serve.
[26:59]There are there's so many attorneys now in the community.
[27:05]It's amazing to see.
[27:05]Um so just you definitely need an advocate on your side.
[27:08]And even with that, know that the system isn't always fair, but
[27:16]there was a case, if I can tell like a quick quick
[27:19]story, there was a case I had um and everyone told me
[27:23]I was going to lose this case.
[27:24]I was going to trial.
[27:25]My my uh guy was seriously injured.
[27:28]Uh he fell in the back of a semi-truck.
[27:30]He only spoke out of it.
[27:32]Went to the hospital.
[27:31]The hospital didn't put um they called it a stroke because it
[27:37]was bleeding in the brain from the trauma when he fell.
[27:39]And nobody said that he fell in the back of the truck.
[27:42]So if you don't fall in the back of the truck, then
[27:43]the insurance policy won't pay for it.
[27:45]So that was a whole issue of the case.
[27:47]So like the injuries were there.
[27:49]Haram, he suffered so much he couldn't go back to work.
[27:53]uh couldn't provide for his family, had five kids, and everyone told
[27:55]me I'm gonna lose this case because my client was like a
[28:00]lot of them could not stop talking, you know, and sometimes we
[28:05]don't make the best witnesses.
[28:05]So, um we really sometimes we don't.
[28:10]So, um we navigated that process.
[28:13]We prepped him.
[28:14]We went to trial.
[28:16]He did what I thought he was going to do.
[28:20]He did not make the best witness, but the jury still came
[28:23]back in my client's favor.
[28:24]They still saw the evidence based on what we were able to
[28:30]position and show them.
[28:30]It moment in itself gave me like hope that if we go
[28:36]through the system and we do our part, it will work.
[28:38]So, alhamdulillah, there is a light at the end of the tunnel,
[28:43]but definitely get an advocate on your side, find some help, and
[28:45]there is a lot of help out there.
[28:48]>> We have one more question for you, actually.
[28:50]Thank you so much.
[28:54]Um, in your work as a lawyer, you may sometimes represent clients
[28:57]whose cases involve haram business.
[28:58]How do you approach those situations while staying true to your values
[29:03]as a Muslim?
[29:02]>> I don't represent them.
[29:05]Um I I have a choice and this is kind of going
[29:10]to um what my my um Dr.
[29:16]Al said is I started my own business for the freedom to
[29:19]be able to practice law the way I needed to in order
[29:27]to stay morally sound to what I believed in.
[29:29]And um I'm building a team that believes the same way that
[29:33]has the same values and it's allowed me the freedom to be
[29:38]able to practice in that way.
[29:39]I don't have to take every case.
[29:40]If a case comes in that I don't I think is haram
[29:45]I think the person is guilty I whatever the reason is I
[29:48]don't good about that I will not take that case and a
[29:52]lot of times in in my practice too in the auto accident
[29:55]field I remember when I first first started um there's a lot
[30:01]of people in the field that I'm in because there's a lot
[30:04]of money in the field that I'm in.
[30:06]So with a field that allows for a lot of money comes
[30:09]a lot of uh people that are just trying to run towards
[30:14]the money and they're not grounded in faith or uh and their
[30:16]moral compasses.
[30:18]So I remember um for the first like three years I literally
[30:22]had to walk people out of my office like I I don't
[30:25]I don't cross this line.
[30:27]I don't cross this line.
[30:28]I don't cross this line.
[30:28]It took about three years before they stopped knocking on my door
[30:32]about how to get clients, where to go, things like that.
[30:34]And now everyone knows.
[30:37]So nobody ever comes to me for it, but um you have
[30:39]to kind of establish yourself and stay firm and know that the
[30:45]money will come with time and hard work and you do not
[30:47]have to cross any lines to be able to get there.
[30:51]You really don't you can do it without them.
[30:53]>> Just a quick followup real quick and and you don't even
[30:57]have to go into detail if you don't want to.
[30:59]Do you feel like because you set your intention and your intention
[31:01]is rooted in in a true belief rather than chasing the money
[31:05]that's what allowed you to grow in your business and at your
[31:08]firm?
[31:09]>> I I I have no doubt in my mind that that's
[31:12]why that is it comes from Allah, right?
[31:14]So we we do our part uh we work hard and if
[31:18]that is it comes from that that's amazing and if not it's
[31:22]going to be seen in the hereafter and I've always hold held
[31:24]true to that.
[31:26]So I 100% believe that >> thank you so much >> Haj
[31:36]Musa we have a question for you and it goes what do
[31:39]you think of students that limit the careers they want to go
[31:41]into because of the money that comes from it um not being
[31:46]enough in their eyes.
[31:50]I think that is the question that faces every young adult.
[31:56]Um and so I guess I would tell you a few things.
[32:00]Uh number one that is whatever is written for you will come.
[32:07]Whatever profession you get into I think Allah subhana wa tala uh
[32:10]but a couple of points I can make and expand upon hopefully.
[32:13]One of the things when I was younger, uh, my father was
[32:19]an engineer and I did not see my father.
[32:22]He worked long days, he worked the weekend.
[32:26]Uh, I didn't see him much.
[32:27]When I got to be uh, you know, my formative years and
[32:32]I got into college, my dad, I remember he used to tell
[32:35]me life is like a scale.
[32:40]On one side is time, on the other side is money.
[32:44]You could have a lot of money, you won't have a lot
[32:47]of time.
[32:48]Or you could have a lot of time, you probably won't have
[32:53]a lot of money.
[32:53]And one of the reasons I went into education and and this
[32:59]is a positive thing.
[32:59]I wanted weekends off.
[33:01]I wanted holidays off.
[33:03]And I wanted my summers off.
[33:06]Not because I'm lazy.
[33:09]I think those who know me know that I am type A
[33:13]and I work really hard.
[33:13]But I think what my dad taught me at a young age
[33:19]and he didn't say these words but you know kvy if you
[33:21]guys study kvy and the habits of effective leaders one of the
[33:27]best habits begin with the end in mind that's what my dad
[33:30]was telling me begin with the end in mind and I will
[33:34]tell you and I think those who know I I got my
[33:39]family out there I wanted to raise a a righteous noble family
[33:42]I wanted to see my kids.
[33:46]I wanted to be involved in their lives.
[33:49]I was all about even at 19, 20 years old.
[33:53]I think uh those who know me, I got married at 23.
[33:55]I was 28.
[33:56]I had three kids.
[33:57]Alhamdulillah.
[33:58]I wanted family.
[34:00]So I could tell you that a begin with the end in
[34:05]mind.
[34:05]And I think no matter what profession you go to go to
[34:10]into, if you excel, if you work hard, you're going to climb
[34:14]and become the top at whatever it is that you do.
[34:18]Um, but it just comes with hard work.
[34:21]And I will say there is so much pressure in this country
[34:27]to make money.
[34:28]And we need money.
[34:30]We need money for our mosques.
[34:31]We need money in order to help give back, to allow clients
[34:36]to come in and get free treatment.
[34:39]All of these things would not be possible if we were not
[34:42]to garnish wealth as a community.
[34:44]And I'll tell you, there's also influence that comes with money and
[34:52]we have community members who have influence that's very beneficial.
[34:57]So I think we can't overlook the fact that money is a
[35:00]tool and money serves a purpose.
[35:06]Um but I think that can't be the only thing uh that
[35:08]you chase.
[35:09]I'd say begin with the end in mind.
[35:11]And I would just say this and I think and I've talked
[35:15]to so many of you privately.
[35:17]I know we probably all share this belief, right?
[35:21]Um there was a study done by Robert Lighter.
[35:26]He interviewed th over 10,000 people over the age of 65 and
[35:31]he boiled it down.
[35:33]He said, you know, if you had to go back and live
[35:35]your life over again, what would you do differently?
[35:39]And to sum it up, everyone at the end of their life,
[35:45]they just want to know that their life mattered, that their life
[35:50]had purpose, and that they added value to this world.
[35:54]And so we're all going to die, right?
[35:56]Like KVI, begin with the end in mind.
[35:58]Like begin with the very end in mind.
[36:01]We will all die.
[36:03]You won't take your money with you.
[36:05]You're not going to take the title with you.
[36:09]And even all your accomplishments in a hundred years, no one will
[36:16]know any of our names, right?
[36:18]And I think if you're an old man, inshallah we're all old
[36:22]men and women and we're having that cup of coffee that you
[36:25]owe me, right?
[36:26]I want to look back at my life and say I did
[36:30]something good and that my life mattered.
[36:32]And so I say like when you go to pick your career,
[36:37]let that be your litmus test because whether you had the money
[36:42]or not, if you could put your head on the pillow, if
[36:43]you knew that you had a fulfilled life, that you touched the
[36:47]lives of others, I think in the end you won at the
[36:53]game of life.
[36:53]No matter how many numbers you have in your bank account or
[36:58]not, right?
[36:59]Like I'll tell you like I have students in who had me
[37:02]for kelk who are doctors like I I'll see students they'll come
[37:07]up to me and they'll hug me they're like 35 years old
[37:09]and they'll thank me you know and I'm like man and I
[37:14]had a couple of students who couldn't speak any English who came
[37:18]from Lebanon they had me for kelk and now they're mashallah very
[37:22]successful.
[37:23]So you look back at that and can't put a price tag
[37:29]on it.
[37:30]That was more than 3 minutes.
[37:32]>> Thank you.
[37:33]Um no, no worries.
[37:34]Actually, I just want to talk on a quick point.
[37:35]You mentioned begin with the end in mind.
[37:37]Some call um some call it dua, some call it manifestation, but
[37:40]regardless of which school, you know, whatever you call it, they both
[37:45]say to believe that it's already there.
[37:46]So when you're manifesting or you're asking Allah for something, you have
[37:49]to believe that it's already there.
[37:50]Um so I wholeheartedly agree and thank you so so much.
[37:52]I have one more question for you if you don't mind that.
[37:56]Okay.
[37:57]Really, we'll limit this one inshallah.
[37:58]It's it's a loaded question so forgive me.
[37:59]But as a Muslim educator and leader working in a district um
[38:04]that is predominantly white, Christian, and conservative, have you ever faced challenges
[38:08]or racism because of your identity?
[38:10]And how did you navigate those experiences while staying true to your
[38:13]values?
[38:21]Um, you know, I think life is all full of challenges.
[38:25]Um, I'll tell you my journey in my with my current district
[38:31]was a roller coaster.
[38:33]I think when I first got hired, there was a tremendous amount
[38:39]of excitement.
[38:38]And then I do remember uh during my at the end of
[38:42]my second year, beginning of my third year, uh there was a
[38:44]presidential election, the climate got very charged in the country and there
[38:52]was talk about lists and deporting and Muslim ban.
[38:58]And I remember the day after the election, uh a parent put
[39:03]on Facebook, fire the Muslim principal.
[39:06]and she encouraged everyone in the community to come out to a
[39:13]board meeting to let the the school board know how they felt
[39:16]about me.
[39:18]Alhamdulillah.
[39:17]Alhamdulillah.
[39:18]I show up at this board meeting.
[39:20]There's nowhere to park.
[39:22]Channel 4 is there.
[39:25]Channel 7.
[39:26]And I'm like, Allah, I don't know what the heck is going
[39:29]on.
[39:30]And I walk in, probably 500 people packing packed in a gym.
[39:37]They were all there to support me.
[39:37]>> Kids, parents for two hours went up to the microphone, talked
[39:43]about their interactions with me.
[39:46]You know, basically our moral compass, right?
[39:49]How we treat people, how we interact with people.
[39:50]Uh that woman who started it, her and her three friends walked
[39:57]out and they didn't dare make a public comment.
[39:58]But I will tell you, it didn't end there.
[40:00]I would tell you for about a year, year and a half,
[40:05]I was under constant scrutiny.
[40:07]I was under the microscope.
[40:10]I uh went through a myriad of challenges because they're not going
[40:17]to stop attacking you.
[40:18]But alhamdulillah, after a few more years, right, that that storm passed.
[40:22]But I think um they see your true character.
[40:26]They know where your heart is at.
[40:29]They know your commitment to the students and to the community and
[40:31]ultimately the truth did prevail.
[40:33]Alhamdulillah.
[40:34]I would tell you that my time in gross point was the
[40:40]it's been the hardest challenge of my life, but it's also been
[40:42]the most fruitful.
[40:44]And I tell you that it reminds me of the surah, you
[40:48]know, sometimes and I had to I had a good friend who
[40:51]might be listening.
[40:53]His name is But he would always he would always remind me
[40:56]of that.
[40:58]It's not after the struggle comes ease.
[41:01]It's actually with the struggle comes the ease, right?
[41:03]And so you you have to lean into that.
[41:05]You have to embrace it.
[41:09]And I'll tell you, you have to and you have to be
[41:11]ready.
[41:12]I remember we had a big drinking problem at my high school.
[41:18]I go to the first prom.
[41:19]Uh kids are throwing up.
[41:22]Kids are passed out in the car.
[41:25]And I'm like, "Wow, this is crazy.
[41:28]you know, for with the school that I came from in Oakland
[41:32]County, we had a school resource officer.
[41:34]So, I say, "Well, you know, don't we have police who come
[41:36]to the dances?" They tell me, "No." Long story short, uh, I
[41:42]put a plan in place, and I know this is going to
[41:47]sound crazy.
[41:45]I said, "I'm going to breathalyze all the kids who come into
[41:51]our prom and our homecoming.
[41:52]You're going to randomly draw a stick and if the stick is
[41:58]marked, you're going to get breathalyzed.
[41:59]I bet you in Dearborn they wouldn't let me do that.
[42:03]You know what the community did in Gross Point?
[42:06]The the overwhelming majority stood behind me because my why is I
[42:14]want kids to be safe and healthy.
[42:15]I want them to make responsible choices.
[42:18]and our attendance plummeted.
[42:18]And then the some parents attacked me and they said attendance is
[42:22]down 30 40%.
[42:24]I said I'd rather have a half empty gym with students making
[42:28]safe, healthy, responsible choices than a gym that's packed and God knows
[42:32]what's going to happen when they all leave and get in their
[42:34]cars.
[42:35]Um but they came after me and said, "I'm imposing shar Allah."
[42:40]And I remember uh a group of parents came to me.
[42:45]She's like, "Well, you're Muslim and you don't drink." I said, "That
[42:47]is true.
[42:49]I Muslim and I do not drink." And then she's like, "And
[42:54]you're trying to impose Sharia law on our students." I said, "No,
[42:59]I'm not.
[43:01]It's called Michigan law.
[43:00]Under 21, you can't drink, right?" And so I think you but
[43:06]you have to be aware and you have and I knew before
[43:11]I I instituted this policy that I would get attacked.
[43:14]Do you have the courage to remain steadfast in your belief?
[43:18]Do you know your why?
[43:19]And for me the why was I wanted to keep kids safe.
[43:24]And every Michigan public school like we are a drug and alcohol-free
[43:31]campus.
[43:30]So if you know you have a problem and you're not willing
[43:34]to tackle it that by default you're condoning it.
[43:38]That was another long answer on it.
[43:40]Sorry.
[43:40]But the answer to all is yes.
[43:46]You will be challenged for your faith.
[43:47]And it doesn't matter.
[43:48]I've worked in conservative communities and I've worked in very liberal communities.
[43:53]Believe me, it's the same.
[43:54]I've had communities that say, "We welcome diversity and we're so glad
[44:00]to have you." And man, you get stabbed in the back just
[44:03]as hard.
[44:04]And I've had people tell and I've gone to other communities.
[44:06]I've worked in several who've said, "Ma, be careful when you come
[44:10]here.
[44:11]We're mildly racist and they've opened up their arms and it's been
[44:16]the best experience." Subhan Allah.
[44:20]Um actually when you mentioned the story about the schoolboard Marining I
[44:24]know you mentioned with hardship comes ease.
[44:24]The verse that came to my mind was um they plan B
[44:28]plans too and alhamdulillah the way that turned out.
[44:32]Thank you for such a beautiful answer.
[44:34]Um stay inshallah we'll get to you next.
[44:36]This is somewhat of a I know that last one was a
[44:37]load of questions is also a two-part loaded question.
[44:40]Um since you're in legislation uh it is going to be related
[44:43]to what's going on overseas.
[44:44]Are you okay with that?
[44:45]>> Yeah of course.
[44:47]Yeah of course.
[44:46]>> Okay.
[44:47]So um how do you navigate working in a place where many
[44:52]individuals around you are supportive of our government's complicity and the genocide
[44:55]that has been taking place in Gaza?
[44:59]Secondly, we've protested, sent emails, boycotted and two years later, not much
[45:04]has changed.
[45:02]So what can we do to actually make an effective change in
[45:07]our government's complicity?
[45:08]>> Yeah, this is a great question.
[45:12]Um, so I I I want to address the first part is,
[45:14]you know, how do you continue to advocate for what's happening in
[45:20]Palestine, the genocide happening in Palestine given the push back you might
[45:23]get from your colleagues and and and I'll tell you, you know,
[45:25]I serve in the Michigan legislature.
[45:26]It's a state body.
[45:29]We focus on Michigan issues.
[45:30]Um, but I have colleagues of mine that take the time they
[45:32]go on a trip every year to go to Israel.
[45:34]I have some that just went last week to meet with the
[45:38]prime minister over there.
[45:38]Uh it is disheartening.
[45:41]I'll be honest.
[45:41]Uh these are the people that I have to work with to
[45:44]help solve the pressing issues of public safety, of road funding, of
[45:47]school aid funding, right?
[45:47]These are the same people.
[45:50]Uh and for me, you know, I'll tell you, and I think
[45:52]the second part of the question is is tied, right?
[45:54]So you have these conversations, you talk to people, you write these
[45:58]emails, but I'll tell you something.
[46:00]Public opinion has changed.
[46:02]Public opinion has changed.
[46:05]If we go back several years ago, the majority of people were
[46:09]supportive of the bombings and the and the massacre that we see.
[46:13]If you go today, 71% of Americans believe America needs to stop
[46:16]the genocide in Gaza.
[46:16]Think of that.
[46:18]And that's not that doesn't happen by itself.
[46:21]That happens because people are tuning in.
[46:23]It happens because we refuse to stop talking about it.
[46:24]It happens because we, you know, unfortunately the genocide is is televised.
[46:28]It's on our Twitter.
[46:30]It's on our Facebook.
[46:31]It's on our Instagram.
[46:33]We see what's happening.
[46:34]And you cannot deny it with your eyes.
[46:36]And so for me, you know, I I I tackle it like
[46:38]I tackle most issues and that is I continue to just have
[46:40]conversations.
[46:41]You can never stop talking about it.
[46:43]You can never be shy from your position.
[46:46]You cannot cower away.
[46:45]Um you got to do it and I'm sure you you touched
[46:49]on this always in a respectful way, always in a polite way.
[46:51]You can never give them an excuse to walk away from the
[46:54]conversation saying, "Oh, this person, you cannot talk to him.
[46:56]He's hotaded.
[46:57]He has a temper." you have to always keep your cool because
[47:02]I have been hit with the most bigoted comments you could imagine.
[47:04]Um, even to this day, some people confuse me.
[47:07]I think I'm better looking than him, but they confuse me with
[47:09]Abdullah.
[47:10]And um, you know, there's no laughs.
[47:13]It's brutal for me.
[47:12]Um, but you know, I I I'll tell you, they still say
[47:16]that.
[47:16]And and and so for me, I think what I'll tell folks
[47:20]on the issue of the genocide in Gaza and of the issue
[47:21]in Palestine and even Lebanon and Yemen and Syria where the bombings
[47:24]have been happening, um, you can never be disheartened.
[47:27]They want us to stop talking about it.
[47:30]They want us to give up.
[47:31]They want us to think you're not getting anywhere with this.
[47:35]Yet, for the first time ever, you've had hundreds of dozens of
[47:40]countries recognize a Palestinian state.
[47:42]You've had people leave the United Nations assembly when Prime Minister Netanyahu,
[47:46]who was a war criminal, someone who the UN considered to be
[47:50]a war criminal, went up to speak.
[47:51]That doesn't happen by itself.
[47:54]That doesn't happen in a vacuum.
[47:55]And that happens because people keep talking about it.
[47:58]Happens because there's pressure that is building and and so whether it's
[48:01]with my colleagues or the work that people are doing when they're
[48:03]reaching out.
[48:04]The work is the same.
[48:07]You have to keep talking about it.
[48:08]You have to keep having the conversations.
[48:10]You have to open people's eyes because like I said, for many
[48:12]of them, I might be the first Arab American they ever meet.
[48:15]They might ask me, "Why does Palestine?" The first question I go,
[48:17]"Why does Palestine matter so much to the Arab community?
[48:19]Why why why doesn't Egypt just take everybody there?
[48:21]Why doesn't Jordan just take everybody there?
[48:23]It makes so much sense." and and you sit with folks and
[48:25]you just have to unpack years of misunderstanding of propaganda of just
[48:30]false narratives that they've been fed and it's brutally it's it's hard
[48:35]work I'll tell you you know the state of Michigan was facing
[48:38]a government shutdown uh if we didn't get a budget deal done
[48:40]by October one that was easier to do uh because we did
[48:45]get a deal than handling some of these conversations but we'll keep
[48:48]having these conversations we don't give up they want us to give
[48:50]up it's the easy thing to do is to give up but
[48:53]you just have know how to become comfortable being uncomfortable in in
[48:57]these conversations and know that look the ultimate the ultimate thing we
[49:01]have I'll say this also is we have the truth on our
[49:04]side we have the truth on our side and if that is
[49:06]what you have you need nothing else no matter how articulate no
[49:11]matter how presentable the truth is a liberating tool that we have
[49:15]distinctly you can't buy it you can't we have it and we
[49:20]keep speaking it to power every single day I think that's how
[49:21]you continue to win and that's how we are winning right right
[49:23]now when the majority of Americans are saying we need to stop
[49:26]sending weapons overseas when they're saying we need to feed Gaza when
[49:28]they say we need to li we need for declaration are now
[49:31]the ones saying a Palestinian it's time for a Palestinian state who
[49:34]would have imagined that so these are the things I think that
[49:36]you know we have to keep looking at and saying we are
[49:40]making progress we have to keep going thank you so much and
[49:43]even in the last couple weeks we've seen so much change so
[49:44]I I very much agree I'm going to ask one more quick
[49:48]question it's it's not going to be as in-depth um but something
[49:50]that they really want to know especially as a career as a
[49:54]polit politician is what skills or experiences best prepared you for a
[49:57]career in politics that you wish you had focused on earlier?
[49:59]>> Yeah.
[50:00]So, I I'll say this for the folks here.
[50:01]I I'm 25 years old.
[50:04]Um I don't hide the fact that I don't know everything.
[50:06]I don't hide the fact that people on this stage I'm learning
[50:11]from as they're speaking.
[50:11]Um and I think as long as you have a growth mindset
[50:14]and and I do start actually one thing I do is I
[50:15]do start with the ended mind.
[50:17]I I start with that.
[50:17]It's a good that you brought that up.
[50:18]And you seek out wisdom.
[50:19]There's times where I am stuck with moral questions where I will
[50:23]call S Kazuini.
[50:23]I will call leaders who I trust who I know I can
[50:27]talk to.
[50:28]I will call mentors of mine.
[50:29]I will call people who have done it before and I will
[50:33]have that growth mindset.
[50:32]It's not easy to think that when you're sitting at a table,
[50:36]you know, one of the reasons I love this job, but why
[50:38]it's so difficult, you mentioned being a CPA, you know, I I
[50:40]vice chaired in the majority the tax policy committee.
[50:43]Ask me how much I knew about what a standard deduction was.
[50:47]Zero.
[50:47]But I had to learn it.
[50:50]I had to learn what the the tax code.
[50:52]I had to learn what uh how property taxes work.
[50:54]Go from that to learning now how we pay for Medicaid in
[50:57]Michigan.
[50:58]I these are two different issues.
[50:59]But I love that thrill of learning things and and just being
[51:02]able to handle complex problems.
[51:04]But you do it with a growth mindset.
[51:06]And I guess that's the biggest thing I would encourage people to
[51:08]have is a growth mindset.
[51:09]Being willing to learn, seek out good advice and and finding the
[51:13]right people to tell you don't know using that.
[51:16]That's a good answer to the right Pino.
[51:18]Can you teach me?
[51:19]That's a good That's a good thing to say to the right
[51:22]people.
[51:23]>> Can I ask you a question?
[51:24]>> Did you use the Oh, this is off.
[51:26]>> Did you use the QR code?
[51:27]>> No, but do we have a school aid fund yet?
[51:30]>> I I can't talk about it.
[51:32]>> Tell about how I >> You still don't have a school
[51:35]aid fund.
[51:34]We don't have a school budget.
[51:39]Yeah, >> you'll have it on October one.
[51:43]>> Thank you so much for that amazing answer.
[51:45]Um Doc, we have a question for you.
[51:47]Um so the first one's actually not a question, it's more of
[51:52]a request actually.
[51:51]Tell us about your 40-day initiative during Maharam and what inspired you
[51:56]to start it?
[51:57]>> So before I answer that, it's so important to have people
[52:02]in our community take different fields because it really does empower us
[52:07]to make not only change but to to to serve our community
[52:10]members like Abbas Far and the state.
[52:13]It's people don't imagine how important this is.
[52:17]When they were talking about cutting funding for Medicaid, cutting funding for
[52:23]virtual visits that a lot of our patients use it, right?
[52:25]Because a lot of them don't have transportation, a lot of them
[52:29]have a hard time coming.
[52:30]It's a huge resource.
[52:30]Uh and I called him.
[52:33]I'm like, Abas, what's going on, man?
[52:35]Uh our patients are not going to be able to be seen.
[52:37]And um he said, don't worry.
[52:39]We're we're fighting.
[52:40]We're we're working really hard.
[52:41]and and honestly that it's a huge blessing that a lot of
[52:46]know about and it's a huge blessing and it's a need we
[52:48]always need someone in politics in the state nationally inshallah to fight
[52:54]for us and fight for working families uh across this country.
[53:00]So thank you.
[53:00]>> So can you repeat your question?
[53:04]um so much as a question, it was actually a request to
[53:08]tell us about your 40-day initiative during Muharam and what inspired you
[53:13]to start it.
[53:13]>> So, you know, when I decided to become a physician, it
[53:21]was to serve and a lot.
[53:23]It's it's really easy to give charity when you have money, right?
[53:30]But charity, you get good deeds for it.
[53:32]But when you give from your time, you're you're you're purifying your
[53:36]soul.
[53:37]You're reminding yourself why you did something.
[53:40]So service is the number one thing to do to prevent burnout.
[53:45]That's one of the reasons to remind myself why I became a
[53:50]physician always.
[53:49]Number two, to honor Allah subhana tala and Im Hussein because IM
[53:56]Hussein gave the ultimate sacrifice.
[53:58]So we can sacrifice as well.
[54:00]And let me tell you something.
[54:02]I wouldn't be able to make that sacrifice without my team.
[54:08]Um because it is hard.
[54:09]It was very hard.
[54:09]And when I said from Muharam um and then I said 40
[54:13]days and then I said shoot is it 30 days or 40
[54:16]days and then we had to do it for an extra 10
[54:19]days.
[54:20]And I made the same mistake last year.
[54:23]Um it was hard cuz we were seeing an extra about 28
[54:26]patient visits patient visits a day in a clinic.
[54:32]So we saw,00 we had,00 visits in those 40 days and it's
[54:37]kind of a purification for us as a team.
[54:41]It's kind of a purification for me where at the end of
[54:46]it you struggle so hard but with that struggle you bro um
[54:50]with that struggle you teach the the the the upcoming doctors this
[54:56]is what it's meant to be.
[54:58]So it's to serve but also to teach as well and to
[55:04]sacrifice and um people think like you know when you give you're
[55:08]going to lose but I always tell like my my team and
[55:11]everybody around me you think you're going to be more generous than
[55:14]Allah subhana t like you think do I think I'm going to
[55:18]be able to give more what I'm giving I'm getting much more
[55:21]in return the days that we do that initiative and this is
[55:24]for all the businesses out there and all their clinics the days
[55:27]we do that and those initiatives we see more patients that are
[55:32]that their insuranceances are paying than the days that we don't like
[55:36]there is a blessing there is a is it that comes with
[55:40]it I have a team member I get goosebumps thinking about this
[55:46]I have a team member that's not a Muslim in muharam 15
[55:49]like two weeks into it I saw my team was getting tired
[55:55]it's hard you're seeing an extra a provider's worth a provers's worth
[56:00]of patients a day and it's non-stop.
[56:03]They're skipping their they tell them take their skipping their breaks.
[56:05]They're not going to the bathroom.
[56:06]The patients these patients coming in don't have insurance so they have
[56:10]a lot of issues.
[56:12]And I said, you know what, I want to give them a
[56:16]bonus.
[56:14]So I gave every single team member a really nice bonus.
[56:19]And it was, you know, it was a good amount of money.
[56:25]And there is one person on my team who is older.
[56:27]She's not a Muslim.
[56:30]She's a working mom.
[56:30]She works over 70 hours a week.
[56:36]Three jobs.
[56:35]She's working non-stop.
[56:37]She refused to take the money.
[56:40]She looked at me.
[56:41]She says, "I am doing this for God.
[56:42]I am doing this for Allah.
[56:45]I want my reward from him.
[56:46]Look, you want your reward." I gave my wife the money.
[56:48]I told her, "Give her the money." She refused it.
[56:52]Subhan Allah.
[56:53]She has been living in a I don't want to discuss her
[57:00]personal situation, but she does.
[57:01]She's never owned the home.
[57:02]I get a phone call that day.
[57:04]She refused the money from a guy.
[57:09]I have a house.
[57:08]Does that person that you asked me about last year still want
[57:14]a house?
[57:12]It's for a steal.
[57:14]She got a house that's worth $230,000 for $150,000.
[57:18]She would have never been able to afford that house.
[57:22]the day she said I want my reward from Allah.
[57:26]So it's a lesson Allah was reminding me reminding her and everybody
[57:28]else and I make sure I made sure to tell all of
[57:29]them and I made sure to tell her that when you give
[57:33]you will get.
[57:35]So when inshallah when everybody gets in those positions and give because
[57:38]you're not taking like Hush said you're not taking anything with you
[57:41]like how much do we how much do we really need right
[57:44]you think the clothes are going to make you happy it's those
[57:47]memories you make it's doing things because you're passionate about it that
[57:50]makes you happy it's it's having that time and that freedom that
[57:53]makes you happy so um inshallah like we all work together and
[57:58]we continue to give back together and and and I and I
[58:00]remind myself like I don't want you guys to think I'm I'm
[58:03]better or I'm a good person.
[58:04]I just this is a worship.
[58:07]God's going to ask you on the day of judgment, what did
[58:09]you do with the ama I gave you?
[58:10]What did you do with with that responsibility I gave you?
[58:14]And I just hope I don't fall short.
[58:16]Please, let's give him Allah salawat after that beautiful story.
[58:23]Dr.
[58:23]Mah, thank you so much.
[58:25]I have one more question for you.
[58:27]Um, and then we'll move on to brother Sam.
[58:30]In medicine, you sometimes face situations that can clash with faith values
[58:35]like end of life care, gender affirming care, or lifestyle choices.
[58:39]How do you handle those tough moments as a Muslim doctor?
[58:43]At the end of the day, no matter what your profession is,
[58:47]you respect individuals, you respect people.
[58:49]We can have our differences.
[58:50]We can be on a different level of understanding and closeness to
[58:55]Allah.
[58:55]And you always respect everybody.
[58:56]And I have uh my own private practice, right?
[58:59]So I can make decisions on what I want to do or
[59:03]how I want to practice.
[59:03]I always respect people.
[59:04]I say, "I'm sorry.
[59:06]I can't, you know, I this is against my religion.
[59:07]This is against my belief.
[59:09]If you want resources, you can go online and and find that
[59:12]somewhere else." Um and and and that's that's the blessing that I
[59:16]have as a uh private practice.
[59:20]And um I haven't had any issues.
[59:22]But there's also education, right?
[59:23]So even so if it's a Muslim patient I educate um like
[59:28]for example if I need to look in your ear as a
[59:30]Muslim woman you don't need to take off your whole hijab right
[59:33]so I say it's no no it's okay you don't need to
[59:36]take off your scarf only take off this ear right I always
[59:38]we always in our clinic have a female provider so I always
[59:42]say hey we have a female provider are you would you like
[59:45]to see that female provider uh for woman issues um about educa
[59:48]educating and also respecting people's beliefs Um, okay, Sam.
[59:55]So, we have a couple questions for you.
[59:57]One of them is uh is has been the talk of the
[60:01]town in the past.
[60:01]Um, so my apologies, but here's the question.
[60:05]Before the Are you ready?
[60:07]>> You're ready.
[60:10]Before the presidential election, Donald Trump visited Dearborn and went to the
[60:14]Great Commoner, which you were part owner of at the time.
[60:17]This caused a huge controversy in the community due to his stance
[60:21]with Israel.
[60:20]What was the decision-making behind opening your doors to him?
[60:32]It wasn't the easiest decision, but I think a lot of times
[60:38]people jump to conclusions.
[60:40]I think a lot of times people forget the intent around decisions.
[60:48]And I've grown up, you know, my father raised me to always
[60:54]open doors, always try to be diplomatic, always allow for conversations to
[61:03]happen.
[61:02]And I know at the time it was extremely controversial and the
[61:09]sole decision didn't come down just on myself but I also didn't
[61:16]stop it from happening.
[61:16]So I do take you know I'll I'll take the burden I'll
[61:21]take the responsibility but at the end of the day it came
[61:28]down to the decision of do we open our doors and allow
[61:33]for the conversation?
[61:33]Do we allow for that diplomacy?
[61:36]Do we invite somebody or not necessarily invite but allow them into
[61:44]our doors with the intent of hopefully changing the narrative.
[61:49]And this was uh this was one of those decisions where when
[61:56]President-elect uh uh Trump was was campaigning, they reached out to the
[62:07]community looking for a place of business.
[62:08]Um, and we were one of maybe two potentially three uh locations
[62:17]that were security cleared, etc., etc.
[62:20]And then also, uh, background checks on on myself and, you know,
[62:24]because there was, uh, Secret Service and all kinds of clearances that
[62:28]had to had to pass before before the event actually took place.
[62:32]But to answer the root of the question, it's like, you know,
[62:37]why or or how could you or how dare you allow this
[62:41]person at the time of genocide?
[62:43]And you know, you could reverse it and you can start to
[62:48]attack other community members and say, "But you were parading around Camila
[62:55]and and and President Biden at the time." And there was so
[62:59]much support on the Democratic on on uh for the Democrats and
[63:03]not enough people speaking out against it either.
[63:08]But where it came down to for me was we knew the
[63:13]choice that we had with Biden.
[63:14]And when Trump came, we knew that there is a likelihood that
[63:21]he would go back to his old ways, but there's also a
[63:27]potential for change.
[63:28]The one demand that I made and I impressed that if he's
[63:35]to come, there has to be talks of ending the wars.
[63:40]What's the likelihood that a local business owner or somebody from our
[63:44]community is going to get the uh maybe not at the time
[63:50]the most powerful man in the world but now the most powerful
[63:55]man in the world literally to have him actually say the words
[63:58]to have him take a plaque that that has a quote for
[64:03]peace from President Ronald Reagan.
[64:05]It wasn't a a plaque awarding him for his good deeds.
[64:09]It was a plaque so that way he would go back to
[64:13]the Oval Office hopefully and remind himself to drive for peace, to
[64:17]drive for ending wars.
[64:17]And what he claims to do is, you know, put America first.
[64:21]And if you're going to put America first, the reality behind putting
[64:24]America first is truly to end the wars overseas.
[64:27]And I knew it was going to be controversial.
[64:31]I didn't know it was going to be I didn't know it
[64:35]was going to turn out the way that it did or that
[64:36]people were going to misconstrue my intentions.
[64:39]I think now we're on day 700 or so of the genocide.
[64:45]And there has not been a single day that I haven't posted
[64:50]in solidarity with Gaza, with Palestine, and even with the Lebanese people
[64:55]that have been bombarded on a daily basis.
[64:56]and leading to President Trump, which I I'm shocked that I actually
[65:01]passed any security clearances because if you see my posts, uh I
[65:05]would be on the first list for deportation.
[65:09]Uh I I I couldn't believe it.
[65:12]But I I haven't stopped and and you know more so I
[65:19]felt like you know the community would have at least respected or
[65:23]backed the decision in hopes that the intent was good.
[65:30]And the reason is because I feel like I've, you know, over
[65:32]over the last, you know, 13 years that I've been doing business
[65:35]in the community that I've stepped up to the plate.
[65:40]Initially, I think we were the very first business in the entire
[65:48]community to post publicly in solidarity with Gaza.
[65:52]We put out a public statement and for myself with aspirations to
[65:59]take Broome to the national level and to franchise nationally that was
[66:06]a enormous risk for me to do for me to take but
[66:11]on top of that I doubled down days after that and I
[66:15]donated 100% of profits from all restaurants to Gaza and we donated
[66:24]and it's not necessary to you know mention the amount but it
[66:28]wasn't a small number and I did it happily and I did
[66:32]it proudly and I was attacked.
[66:34]You have no idea the DMs that I was receiving.
[66:37]I was attacked on a daily basis.
[66:40]People were tearing down my character.
[66:43]Everything that I have done in my entire career, I don't even
[66:47]have a speeding ticket.
[66:48]There's not one blemish on my record, but I was torn down
[66:53]and all my community service was taken away from me.
[66:55]All for one single decision.
[66:57]Although the intent was the purest of intents, I'm not out here
[67:03]taking the man out to dinner.
[67:04]He simply came into the restaurant in hopes that we would show
[67:08]him what our community is about.
[67:12]I don't think he's ever been around Lebanese Americans, uh, Palestinian Americans.
[67:18]I don't think he knows what what we're like.
[67:21]And so, opening those doors, having those conversations, you know, especially with
[67:24]his son-in-law being, you know, Lebanese uh uh a Lebanese uh individual,
[67:32]I felt like there was a a shred of hope.
[67:34]Um, so it was it was a scary time for me, but
[67:42]alhamdulillah, you know, we made it through.
[67:46]And I know there are people that still don't forgive.
[67:50]Uh hopefully they'll forget eventually.
[67:52]I'm I still get the comments.
[67:56]You know, recently there's somebody that that saw my picture and and
[68:00]started to to comment on it about, you know, am I inviting
[68:03]him to the great commoner?
[68:04]Well, at the time, you know, I was actually in the process
[68:06]of selling the Grey Commoner, which I did.
[68:09]Um, so no, I'm not inviting him to the Great Commoner, nor
[68:12]would he ever get another invitation unless he stops all wars.
[68:16]But, uh, that is a long shot.
[68:19]I think there's so many factors that that come to play.
[68:23]But the the over the the point, you know, and the intent
[68:28]of of the decision was was was one of of purity and
[68:33]one of uh one that I still stand by proudly.
[68:38]I mean, at the end of the day, uh it wasn't it
[68:40]wasn't the best decision, but I stand behind my decision because I
[68:46]did it with pure intent.
[68:46]So, I don't know that you can take that away from me,
[68:50]nor would I let anybody take it take it away from me,
[68:51]but it, you know, that's it's something that we learn from and
[68:54]I and I learned quite a bit from the experience and I
[68:57]continue to learn.
[68:58]Um, but alhamdulillah for everything.
[69:00]>> Alhamdulillah.
[69:01]I actually want to make a couple points.
[69:02]Um, reminds me also of I mean, I imam before every battle
[69:06]or Imam Ali before every battle, they would have dialogue and they
[69:09]would try to come to a peaceful agreement before anything would happen.
[69:11]Um, so I think it's within our values to try to have
[69:15]that dialogue and never stray away from it.
[69:18]Um, secondly, a lot of people will watch like Aazida or you
[69:20]know CNN to get their news.
[69:23]I promise you like I I follow Sam, I know Sam very
[69:25]well.
[69:26]He posts consistently as a voice for the Palestinian people, for the
[69:29]Lebanese people and for oppression all around the world.
[69:32]So um, his intentions are pure and I thank him for moving
[69:34]into, you know, a less loaded question.
[69:36]Um something that even I want to know actually is entrepreneurs have
[69:42]a desire for success, growth and expansion.
[69:43]Sometimes this can cause them to be stuck in this dunya and
[69:49]forget about their family and faith.
[69:50]How have you found your balance between your path as an entrepreneur
[69:54]and your isl Islamic identity?
[69:58]So initially you know I I opened my first business I think
[70:02]when I was 22 or 23 years old.
[70:04]I took my first loan from my father which I'm you know
[70:09]I was I was fortunate enough to be able to start out
[70:15]um and you know the pursuit for success was was always there
[70:18]and I tried so hard and I wanted to make it work
[70:22]and I tried and tried and tried but I feel like my
[70:28]my why was off.
[70:30]Why I was doing it was because I wanted to be successful.
[70:33]I wanted to make money.
[70:37]And then as I got older, as I matured and after I
[70:40]moved back to the community, I remembered what my why is.
[70:46]I remembered that you know doing business is one obviously of course
[70:50]is always to give back like you know Dr.
[70:53]does and and others here.
[70:55]But at the same time, you know, remembering that while opening businesses,
[71:02]being content, maybe it wasn't meant for me because I opened and
[71:07]I failed and I opened and I failed and I would pivot
[71:09]and I failed and you know, I kept trying over and over
[71:13]and I just couldn't figure out what what was I doing wrong.
[71:15]I was an MBA at the time and I was in the
[71:20]process of becoming a CPA and you know finally it clicked and
[71:23]I just said alhamdulillah if it's not meant to be it's just
[71:28]simply not meant to be and that's why my parents pushed me
[71:30]for education so I'm just going to pivot and fall back on
[71:34]my education and I'll just go into accounting and hope for the
[71:38]best there and that's when I feel like God opened it up
[71:42]for me with a zetin I I felt more secure in what
[71:46]I was ing and and remembering what the true meaning of alhamdulillah
[71:51]is and being content and understanding that when you're pursuing something for
[71:56]the wrong reasons, maybe Allah won't give it to you.
[72:00]And and the reason for that is because you might follow the
[72:03]wrong path at that point.
[72:05]A lot of times people make a lot of money very quickly
[72:08]and I've seen it amongst people I've grown up with where they
[72:12]came upon a lot of money very quickly and I'll tell you
[72:15]they're not on the same path that they were when I once
[72:17]knew them.
[72:18]And I thank God because I as I when I moved back
[72:24]to the community and I opened up my business and alhamdulillah I
[72:27]did see that first glimpse of hope that first glimpse of success
[72:30]it actually drew me closer to my faith.
[72:33]I was more embedded in my faith.
[72:36]I felt stronger in what I was doing and that's what kind
[72:41]of brought me to the community and then I was able to
[72:46]give back to the community and and it just came full circle.
[72:49]Everything came full circle, excuse me, full circle and I felt better
[72:53]about what I was doing.
[72:57]A lot of times people think, you know, making money is is
[73:00]is everything.
[73:02]But the reality of it is is having your family, having your
[73:07]friends, you know, being blessed with a beautiful wife and kids, those
[73:11]are the true blessings.
[73:13]And that's where, you know, if Allah is going to give you
[73:18]that, that's where you're going to feel it.
[73:19]that is that is ah and alhamdulillah whatever comes with it you
[73:24]know I'm I'm thankful for that as well but I've seen enough
[73:26]ups and downs in my life and you know that's the one
[73:30]thing about about our community is a lot of times you only
[73:31]see the ups of people but you don't see what happens behind
[73:35]closed doors you don't see the struggles you don't see the failures
[73:38]but they are there absolutely there but that's what makes an entrepreneur
[73:44]specifically stronger and more focused is when you see those failures when
[73:48]you experience them.
[73:49]You'll never be successful until you fail.
[73:51]I've always lived by that.
[73:54]You can't be successful until you fail because if you hit that
[73:57]first roadblock, you're going to fall straight on your face.
[73:58]So, that allows you to get stronger.
[74:02]And alhamdulillah for for for that.
[74:04]Alhamdulillah for all of my experiences um whether controversial or not.
[74:09]I wish you would have led with this question instead of the
[74:13]other one, but I'll take them.
[74:14]So, alhamdulillah.
[74:17]very much appreciate your detailed answers.
[74:19]I'm sorry, in next time we'll have you, I'll make sure to
[74:22]run by the order with you.
[74:23]Um, okay, from the bottom of my heart, seriously, um, on behalf
[74:26]of the entire NYC and everybody here, I want to thank all
[74:30]of our panelists for the thorough responses, um, their dedication to serving
[74:33]our community and for their commitment to the youth.
[74:35]May Allah subhanaa tala bless you and I hope you have all
[74:39]enjoyed the insights that as much as I have.
[74:41]Um, we are finished up with all the questions, but we do
[74:43]have refreshments outside.
[74:45]I would like to invite everybody to join us.
[74:45]Panelists as well if you have to go we completely understand.
[74:49]If not please join us inshallah um we can communicate.
[74:51]We'll mingle in a more intimate setting.
[74:53]Um so let's end it with salawat and and thank you again
[74:58]ali Muhammad.
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