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Born in Beirut, Lebanon in 1955, Mr.
Siblani came to the United States in 1976 to pursue his education.
He completed his B.S.S. in electrical engineering in 1979 at the
University of Detroit. In 1980 he assumed the position of Vice President
at Energy International, Inc., a major import-export firm dealing
with the Middle East. He held this position until he began The Arab
American News in 1984, at which time he resigned to run the newspaper
full time.
Siblani's prime motivation for beginning
the newspaper was the 1982 Israeli invasion of his homeland Lebanon
and the startling discovery of the biased fashion in which the major
media in America covered such events in the Middle East. In addition,
he had settled in the nation's largest Arab American community,
in Metropolitan Detroit, and thus he believed the idea for a community
newspaper was viable.
Siblani has now published The Arab
American News for twenty three years. The newspaper rapidly became
one of the local and national media's most popular resources for
American-based Arab and Arab American opinion and analyses.
Mr. Siblani¹s rare political acuity is appreciated by the media.
He also has a well-deserved reputation for honest yet engaging interviews
with an eye and ear for both the culture and political milieu he
lives in and those of the region of the world he was born in. He
effortlessly bridges the knowledge and understanding gaps that exist
in American audiences and is an expert producer of useful sound
bytes. He is nimble with analogies that quickly illuminate issues
for those whose backgrounds are sketchy.
Siblani has always been a staunch
supporter of Palestinian rights and opponent of Israeli occupation
and aggression. When Palestinian was considered the "P"
word and virtually no one talked about the subject in public, Siblani
stood up and shouted from the pages of The Arab American News and
whatever opportunities he could get with the media. He was a fearless
and vocal opponent of the 1991 Gulf War, tirelessly making back-to-back
media appearances and giving print interviews in an effort to avert
certain disaster for the Arab World. He did the same thing trying
to avert the 2003 invasion and occupation of Iraq.
The following is a partial list of
Mr. Siblani's media appearances, in addition to local TV and radio
stations, through the last 20 years of publishing the Arab American
News:
- BusinessWeek
- New TV
- Decmocracy Now
- Metro Times
- LBC-Lebanese Broadcasting Network
- NPR
- Al Manar TV
- ABC News
- CBS News
- BBC
- CNN's Larry King Live
- CNN's Crossfire
- CNN's News Night
- ABC's Nightline
- MSNBC's Hardball
- MSNBC Abrams Report
- Al Jazeera & all Arab media
- Fox's- The O'Reilly Factor
- PBS's MacNeil Lehrer Report
- USA Today
- Wall Street Journal
- The New York Times
- The Guardian
- The Washington Post
- The Detroit Free Press
- The Detroit News
- Asharq Alawsat Pan Arab daily
based in London, England
- Assafir Lebanon's leading newspaper
- Chicago Tribune
- Los Angeles Times
- Philadelphia Inquirer
- Boston Globe and Mail
- Newsweek
- The Weekly Standard
- The New Yorker
- Le Monde
- Le Republic
Newspapers throughout the world including
Japan, China, India, Pakistan, Africa, Britain, Europe, South America
and the Arab World.
- Successive American administrations
have sought Mr. Siblani's counsel
at the White House on issues related to the Arab World
- He attended the Arafat-Rabin-Clinton
White House signing ceremony
- As a journalist, the White House and
State Department press offices
stay in contact with him and he has attended White House lawn
picnics for the media.
- Siblani's influence extends abroad as
well. He recently met with Syrian
President Bashar Assad and Syrian Foreign Minister Farouq al-Sharaa,
as well as with Lebanese President Emile Lahoud.
- He has been a guest of Tunisian President
Zine al-Abideen bin Ali,
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, Malaysian Prime Minister
Mahater Mohamed - among other world leaders.
- Journalists have applauded Siblani
not only as a source but as a peer.
In 2003, he addressed the American Society of Newspaper Editors
at their annual convention.
Mr. Siblani has also become the voice
of the local Arab American community.
While smaller papers have sprung up and fallen by the wayside, The
Arab American News just keeps getting stronger. Siblani helped found
the Arab American Political Action Committee (AAPAC) in Dearborn
and the Congress of Arab American Organizations (CAAO) - an unprecedented
success at fostering cooperation among the community's many groups.
Chairman - The Congress of Arab American
Organizations A 43 member Arab consortium.
Chairman The Arab American Political Action Committee.
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