LUCKY SEVERSON, guest anchor: They first arrived in the U.S. in the mid-'90s, mostly Georgia and Tennessee -- Muslim immigrants from war-torn Somalia, searching for a little peace and happiness. But they were alarmed at what they felt was an environment too promiscuous and too violent for their children. So they went on a search for a smaller, safer place to raise their families, and about a thousand ended up in Lewiston, Maine. And in Lewiston, they may have found more or less than they bargained for.We were curious about the moral obligations and dilemmas facing communities, facing new immigrants.
Hardly a scene you'd expect to find in what is arguably the whitest state in the union.
But at the Lewiston Adult Education Center, English as a second language classes are busting at the seams with students "from away," as Mainers like to say. In this case, from Somalia, way way away.JIM BENNETT (City Administrator): Two years ago, we had about 50 students in our school system that had requirements of English as a second language. Today we are 250 to 300.
SEVERSON: Jim Bennett, the besieged city administrator. Two years ago, there wasn't one solitary Somali in all of Lewiston. Now there are over a thousand, in a town of only thirty-five thousand. Like many immigrants, they like to stick together.
MUHAMMAD (Somali immigrant): We're family. So we don't want to be lonely here. So we are in a group, which, we don't see anything wrong with that.
STORE OWNER: You know this meat is camel.
SEVERSON: It's not that this camel meat troubles some Lewistonians. It's because so many Somalis came so suddenly, taxing city services, taking scarce jobs, and driving up the rent.
(to Mr. McLeod): You say you lost an apartment to a Somali?
SCOTTY MCLEOD (Lewiston resident): Yes, the landlord thought their money was better than mine.
SEVERSON: We couldn't verify Scotty's story, but there were others. This is Desiree Leddington.
DESIREE LEDDINGTON (Lewiston resident): I kinda feel the city could do a little more for us who were here first, because I am almost eight months pregnant, and I am living in a one-bedroom apartment with two other people that are expecting any day. Because there just isn't any housing, most of it is going to the Somalis.SEVERSON: Vicky Camire, proprietor of Vicky's Market, says she's noticed tensions rising since the Somalis started arriving.
VICKY CAMIRE (Lewiston resident): There is a lot of talk that they are getting more benefits than the average American person. Not being racist or anything -- I am not prejudiced in any way. I just feel that there are too many Americans that are poor, that are homeless, that are disabled. They need the help first.SEVERSON: Truth is, the Somalis aren't getting any more benefits than ordinary Lewistonians. Those are just rumors. It's also not true that the government gives them $10,000 cash to buy new cars.
UNIDENTIFIED SOMALI: I buy the car, it's not welfare, honest.
SEVERSON: Mark Schlotterbeck, a missionary at the Calvary United Methodist Church, says there were some wild ideas flying around.
MARK SCHLOTTERBECK (Missionary, Calvary United Methodist Church): I think people were afraid of their life changing, life as they knew it changing. People came who were dressed differently, who were strong in another way of faith, who looked different.
SEVERSON: There were so many rumors and stories and Somalis that Mayor Raymond wrote an open letter saying the city was "overwhelmed" and asking Somalis to stop coming and "exercise discipline." It wasn't a mean letter, but it drew so much national attention, the mayor virtually disappeared and stopped talking to the national press.Mr. BENNETT: I think we could have done maybe a different way of trying to address the issue, so it didn't become a national spotlight.
SEVERSON: The Somalis say the letter only made matters worse.
DIREIYE AHMED (Somali immigrant): After the letter, it seems people, like if I drive down the street, people are going to make signs like I am some kind of animal or something. I am just a man, just like anybody else.MUHAMMAD: So it's very hard. It's very hard. Is it harder after the letter? Yes, it is very hard because some of them, not the intellectual ones, they look at us in a funny way.
SEVERSON: Harvard expert on immigration Mary Waters says Lewiston's reaction is not that unusual.
Professor MARY WATERS (Harvard University): You can find backlashes against European immigrants, and Italians, Irish, Polish, and Jews. Throughout our history there have been cases in which immigrants have been the object of a lot of dislike and distrust and actual violence against them. So it is expected what happened in Lewiston, I think.
SEVERSON: History has repeated itself more than once in Lewiston. The first major immigrant group to face a hostile reception were the Irish canal diggers in the 1850s.


Prof. WATERS: They were forbidden to speak French in school. They were last chosen to be hired. A lot of prejudice against both those groups.
RODA ABDI (Somali immigrant): The number one thing we like about America is, like, you can practice your religion.
Prof. WATERS: I think we have a moral obligation based on the values that we hold of being a refuge for people who are fleeing persecution. The nation as a whole has decided to let the Somalis in and has given them assistance and has brought them in. It is really Lewiston that's taking care of them and educating their kids and housing them and finding them jobs. In some sense they are doing the work of the nation by absorbing these immigrants that we let in, and it is hitting them.
Mr. BENNETT: There were so many other uncertainties and pressures that were going on that have nothing to do with their decision to make our city their homes. If the economy was a little better and we weren't getting ready to go to war, and, you know, maybe the BLACK HAWK DOWN movie didn't come out.
MUHAMMAD: They don't know the difference -- Middle East and Somalia -- that's the problem. We're an African continent. We're not Israel. We're not Iraq. We are not Egypt. We are Africa.
SEVERSON: After the mayor's letter, a public show of support and welcome signs that feelings are on the mend, but still a ways to go.