‘We rise by
LIFTING ’ OTHERS
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Radiant Hands’ president helps Afghan refugees start new lives
By JOEY JOHNSTON, ’81
URING A LEADERSHIP SEMINAR a couple years ago, Magda Elkadi Saleh had to answer the question, “What do you do?” She struggled. The founder of two Tampa Islamic schools and current administrator of one, she’s also president of Radiant Hands, a nonprofit created to support Muslim women and at-risk families now tasked with resettling Afghan newcomers. She’s a mother of four, grandmother of eight, and wife to Mohamad, a Tampa neurologist. She drew up a list. “But they said, ‘We’re not asking what’s your job. We want to know this: What do you do?’” says Saleh, MPH ’95, Life Member. “It took me about 90 minutes to think about it. In the end, my motivation is just to help people realize their greatest potential. It’s sad to see all the resources we have and know there are people suffering. I believe in the quote that says we rise by lifting others.’’ In recent months, that has required muscle. Radiant Hands is Tampa’s go-to for Afghan families fleeing their country following the U.S. military withdrawal in August 2021; the City of Tampa dubbed it the official welcoming agency for evacuees. Saleh and her team, who’ve been helping resettle refugees from Islamic and Arabic-speaking countries since 2015, have welcomed more than 360 people in the most recent wave, coordinating everything from airport arrivals to jobs and housing. The latter has proved a major challenge in what may finish this year as the nation’s No. 1 hottest real estate market, predicts online marketplace Zillow. Rental rates shot up a record 24 percent in 2021, fueled by an influx of new residents seeking a lower cost of living, warmer climate and fewer pandemic restrictions, says real estate data firm CoStar Group. Meanwhile, construction industry challenges, some of them pandemic-related, have resulted in fewer new single-family homes. Radiant Hands works with Airbnb, hotels and real
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UNIVERSITY of SOUTH FLORIDA
estate professionals to find housing that does not require a credit check, because many Afghan refugees have no credit history. They receive a one-time U.S. government payout of $1,300 per family member. In Tampa, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment is more than $1,800 a month. “Our goal is to identify a place and make sure it is furnished [with donated items], so when they walk in, they feel like they are at home,’’ Saleh says. Radiant Hands helps meet families’ religious, cultural and language needs while also finding rental assistance, job-placement services or resources to start a business. “I’m doing my best to start my life from zero,” evacuee Malalai Rostami, 24, told the Tampa Bay Times. “I’m here in Florida now. I feel safe, I feel secure.” That’s largely due to Saleh. “I have not seen anyone who is as sincere and dedicated and pure as her,” says Radiant Hands’ executive director Ghadir Kassab. “With this type of business, you must have a big heart or you couldn’t do it. It requires a lot of sacrifices, empathy and thoughtfulness.’’ That includes the small stuff, like gift baskets suggested by the first family Radiant Hands helped back in 2015. The baskets include a copy of the Muslim holy book, the Quran; a prayer rug; teapot and coffee pot; hygiene products; and traditional cookies. The accompanying note, written in Arabic, says: “Wishing you ease; you’re among family.’’ Family always has been important to Saleh and USF remains an important part of hers. She came to the United States in 1967 as a baby, the Austrian-born daughter of Egyptian parents. When USF’s medical school brought her husband to Tampa in 1990, she saw few hijabs, the veil worn by Muslim women. “I think there were just four of us — myself, my sister and two friends,’’ Saleh says. “Now there are many Muslim Right: Magda Saleh poses with a collaborative art project created at a refugee welcoming event in 2016.