Merage luncheon attracts some big names
B.W. COOK
Former Secretary of State Madeline Albright addressed a gathering
this week at the Balboa Bay Club & Resort in Newport Beach on behalf
of the Merage Foundation for The American Dream.
“I had the honor of attending a naturalization ceremony in New
York in 1998, witnessing immigrants take the oath of allegiance. It
happened to be the 50th anniversary of my own arrival in America,
which occurred on Nov. 11, 1948,” said the woman who served under
President Bill Clinton. “After the event, a man from Ethiopia came up
to me and said, ‘Only in America could a new citizen, a man from
Ethiopia, meet the secretary of state.’ I replied: ‘Only in America
could a woman, an immigrant from Czechoslovakia, become the secretary
of state.’”
The Merage Foundation for The American Dream is concerned with
turning possibilities into the promises of tomorrow. Albright fronted
a presentation supported the dream and leadership of Iranian-American
immigrant and businessman Paul Merage, his wife Lilly and their
philanthropic family. Merage welcomed Albright and a host of
distinguished guests with a message.
“This is about building opportunity for immigrants to the United
States,” Merage said. “It’s about giving back so that others may
realize their dreams in a country that makes dreams possible.”
The positive message was taken a step further by Albright.
“The American dream comes down to people, and the fundamental
difference that opportunity creates in the lives of individuals and
families.” Albright said. “Yet some feel threatened. Some believe
that the day their family arrived in America, the door was closed.”
The diminutive woman in a navy blue suit with a large pin on her
lapel, fashioned after the American flag, went on to say: “There are
those who fear that America is losing it’s unique identity, it’s
character, as a result of immigration. In fact, it is the opposite.
While every wave of immigration in difficult times throughout
American history has been met by such warnings, immigrants are not a
burden. They come to America as dreamers and as doers.
“We are all equal shareholders in The American Dream, whether we
came in the 17th century or just arrived in the 21st.”
Her address was brief and to the point. Albright told the
audience: “We must not become consumers of liberty, but rather
defenders of liberty. We must participate in our democracy.”
Quoting President Harry S. Truman, Albright reflected on her own
beginnings when, as an 11-year-old, her family fled Prague,
Czechoslovakia, after surviving Nazi rule and then communism.
Truman said, “Americans are diverse people. Respect for his or her
right to be different is part of the true American way. It’s
essential to democracy, and America is the hope of the world.”
In addition to recognizing Albright, the Merage Foundation honored
other successful immigrant- Americans who have also affected the
lives of others. They included Cuban-American businessman and
philanthropist Armando Cordina; Pulitzer Prize winner and former New
York Times editor Max Frankel; Nobel Laureate Mario Molina; and Dr.
David Ho, the respected AIDS and SARS researcher and Time magazine’s
1996 Man of the Year.
Perhaps most impressive was the introduction of some 29 young
guests of the Merage Foundation. They came from all over the world
and stood proudly at tables throughout the Balboa Bay Club ballroom.
One by one, these foreign-born Americans introduced themselves.
They included Onyi Offor from Nigeria and a graduate of Harvard
University; Shijun X, an MIT graduate from China; Alina Rekhtman of
Russia and a graduate of Princeton University; Laurel Yong-Hwa Lee,
an MIT graduate from South Korea; Russian-born Katerina Kelman, a
graduate of Stanford; and Congolese Eric Mvukiyehe, a graduate of the
University of Washington. They and the others addressed the crowd and
shared their dreams for the future.
Did they aspire to go shopping with a celebrity, buy a BMW
convertible and go to an all-night rave party? No, they spoke of
curing cancer, taking care of the aged, becoming judges in family
court, serving the poor and disenfranchised both in the United States
and in their native lands, working for social justice, serving in
uniform health care, improving education and creating business
opportunities for people with limited access to resources. They spoke
about the future of humankind. And they spoke about the potential
future of America.
Jeffrey Davidow, president of the Institute of the Americas and
the former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, introduced his former boss and
said, “There are 35 million immigrants living in the U.S. today. That
means there are more foreign-born citizens in the U.S. than there are
Canadians in Canada.”
“Some one million immigrants come to America legally each and
every year,” Merage said.
Albright summed up the point of view: “America is strong because
we have brought together the strength of so many people -- so many
diverse people -- from sea to shining sea,” Albright said.
Spotted in the crowd were O.C. residents Maralou and Jerry
Harrington, Judy and Joel Slutzky, Twyla Martin, Elizabeth and John
Stahr, Jim Warsaw, Bob Bassett, Victoria and Gilbert LeVasseur, John
Jolliffe and Marshall Kaplan.
Also attending were Merage family members, including children of
Paul and Lilly Merage: Richard Merage, Lauren Merage and Michelle
Janavs. Extended family members -- including Louise Merage, Cam
Merage and Greg Merage -- also were front and center in support of
the foundation.
For more information on the Merage Foundation for The American
Dream, call (949) 474-5880.
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