@article{Viviani_2019, title={The Requests of Syrians in America to End the Enduring Indifference of the Ottoman Authorities: An Article Dated 1908}, volume={19}, url={https://journals.uio.no/JAIS/article/view/7750}, DOI={10.5617/jais.7750}, abstractNote={<p>The migration of Syrians to America in the 19th and 20th centuries is a major issue which has been widely covered in both fictional and non-fictional literature. Over the same period, many Arab magazines were founded both in North and South America, or “migrated” to those countries. An example is <em>al-Jāmiʿa</em>, which was relocated from Alexandria, Egypt, to New York in 1906, where its founder, the renowned intellectual Faraḥ Anṭūn, was able to undertake a profound study of Western society. Not only did this give him a better insight into that society, but also helped him to better understand the critical issues in his native milieu and the tensions between Turks and Arabs, which often came to the fore, especially when the latter expected the former to help them through important phases of their social, civil, and economic life even in the land they migrated to.</p> <p>This paper analyses an article in <em>al-Jāmiʿa</em> by Nāṣīf Shiblī Damūs, previously published in the epony-mous newspaper, in which Syrian migrants in the United States, with Anṭūn supporting them, lament the indifference of the Ottoman authorities toward them and put forward a number of specific requests, using the magazine as a means of making themselves heard by the entire Arab and Ottoman community throughout the world.</p>}, journal={Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies}, author={Viviani, Paola}, year={2019}, month={Dec.}, pages={113–128} }