Dec 07, 2025
This commentary is by Barbara Benton. She is a licensed clinical mental health counselor in Burlington, as well as a volunteer for the Vermont Afghan Alliance and other local organizations.  In light of the recent violence in Washington, D.C. and the heightened anti-immigrant sentiment being pr omoted at the highest levels of this country, I want to reflect to Vermonters some of my experiences with the Afghans I have come to know. My association with Afghanistan started about 16 years ago when I hosted a 16-year-old Afghan teenager in my home for almost a full year. He had received a scholarship from the U.S. government to study for one academic year in the U.S. Despite propaganda to the contrary, his family hoped and trusted that he would be treated well in the US. I came to know him as one of the kindest and most thoughtful human beings I have met, and also came to truly understand that he was this way because his family valued those qualities, no less than I and my family did. How enlightening to me that my family and his shared these values, despite differences in culture, customs and religion. And no surprise to me at all that his family and mine wanted their kids to be safe and cared for. He was eventually able to return to the U.S. on a student visa. Today he lives in another state and was so proud to become a U.S. citizen. I consider him to be a part of my family and know him to still be the kind and thoughtful person I met half his life ago. As a volunteer for The Vermont Afghan Alliance, I have gotten to know many of the recent Afghan arrivals here in Burlington and Montpelier. What I see is that they also, while being a diverse group of human beings, care about others and are so appreciative of the opportunity to work and live, and become a part of the social fabric here in the US. Personal connections with Americans who care about their well-being, even a smile from a stranger, help so much in the process of welcoming newcomers and helping them integrate into our community.  So please do not be inclined to judge an entire group of people based on the actions of one apparently troubled individual. Remember that we can share values of kindness and inclusion across cultures and diverse lifestyles. And, were they to be returned to Afghanistan, they would face persecution and death because of their loyalty to the U.S. Please stand with the Vermont Afghan Alliance, with me and with our Afghan allies as we continue to welcome them as valued members of our community. Let Vermont set the right tone in this time when some would try to tear us apart from each other and from our own humanity.  Read the story on VTDigger here: Barbara Benton: Do not judge an entire group of people based on the actions of one individual. ...read more read less
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