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Shirin Sadeghi

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Steve Jobs Was an Arab American

Posted: 10/06/11 01:40 AM ET

Abdul Fattah Jandali, a young Syrian Muslim immigrant in Wisconsin, never met his son Steve Jobs. When a baby was born to the 23-year-old Jandali -- now known as John -- and his 23-year-old German-American girlfriend, Joanne Schieble, in 1955, there was no chance he'd be able to grow up with his biological parents.

Joanne, who belonged to a white, conservative Christian family could not convince her parents to marry an Arab, a Muslim, according to Jandali, who called her father "a tyrant" in a New York Post interview in August 2011. In fact, according to Jandali, she secreted off from Wisconsin to liberal San Francisco to sort out the birth and adoption without letting either him or her parents know.

And so it was that a nameless Arab-American baby was adopted by an Armenian-American family. Clara Hagopian and her husband Paul Jobs had been married around seven years and had not been able to conceive. The little bundle that would be Steve was very much wanted in the Jobs household.

Steve Paul Jobs, as they named him, grew up without ever knowing his biological father. It seems he had no interest in knowing him later in life, either. When, in August 2011, the London tabloid The Sun, contacted Jandali, he publicly reached out to Steve saying, "I live in hope that before it is too late he will reach out to me. Even to have just one coffee with him just once would make me a very happy man."

But Steve never replied. Less than two months later, he has passed away.

Jandali says it was his "Syrian pride" that kept him from reaching out to his famous son. In a September 2011 interview with the Reno Gazette -- Reno, Nevada being the city the 80-year-old Jandali lives and where, having never retired, he is the Vice President of a casino. "The Syrian pride in me does not want him ever to think I am after his fortune. I am not. I have my own money. What I don't have is my son...and that saddens me."

One wonders what Jobs knew of his background.

His biological father was no ordinary Syrian. According to an interview he gave to the Al Hayat newspaper in February 2011, he was born in French-mandated Syria in 1931 in the town of Homs to a "self-made millionaire" father with no university education who owned "several entire villages" and a homemaker, traditional mother. He was one of five children -- the only son of a family with 4 daughters.

He left Syria at 18 to study at the American University in Beirut, where he was "a pan-Arab activist", a "supporter of Arab unity and Arab independence" who organized with some of the most famous activists of his time. After university, he moved to the United States, and the rest is history, though he regrets leaving his homeland.

"If I had the chance to go back in time, I wouldn't leave Syria or Lebanon at all. I would stay in my home country my whole life. I don't say that out of emotion but out of common sense," he told Al Hayat. "Of course I miss the social life and wonderful food [in Syria], but the most important thing is the outstanding cultural attributes which in general you don't find in the West," says the non-practicing Muslim, who nonetheless "believe[s] in Islam in doctrine and culture."

His nostalgia aside, millions worldwide would no doubt disagree with Jandali. Surely a Steve Jobs of Apple Computers could only have been possible in America.

The estrangement of a father and son is made even more tragic by the fact that not only did each know of the other, but they shared more than a father-son biological connection. Jandali and Schieble eventually did marry -- just ten months after she gave their baby boy away to adoption, and just a few months after Joanne's father died. And they had another child -- a daughter with whom Steve eventually had a relationship. Mona Jandali -- now Simpson -- is a world reknowned author who was, in her own words, "very close" to her brother Steve once they established a relationship as adults.

According to Jandali, he had no idea until just a few years ago that the baby his then-girlfriend secretly gave birth to in San Francisco was the man the world knew as Steve Jobs. But Steve must have known for decades, through his relationship with Mona.

In the August New York Post interview, Jandali tried to let his son know that he didn't know of Joanne's San Francisco plans. That he was saddened when he learned of it. "I honestly do not know to this day if Steve is aware of the fact that had it been my choice, I would have loved to have kept him," he said.

And unless Jobs's upcoming November authorized biography addresses the issue, Jandali may never know. Instead, with news of Jobs's death, Jandali has refused any further interviews about his long lost son and will always wonder what could have been. In that, he will not be alone.

 

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07:43 PM on 11/04/2011
wow. khaylee moto shakeram.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trial Lawyer
11:42 PM on 10/07/2011
This is perhaps the stupidest article I have ever read. What's the point? Arabs should be proud that they contributed genetic material and took no responsibility to support Steve Jobs? Ridiculous! As a father, I will tell you my genetic contribution was the least important thing I have ever done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Toby1kanobe
SoCal is REALLY different from Vancouver!
02:25 PM on 10/08/2011
It seemed obvious to me that the point of this article was the fact that being Arab in America is considered a bad this and here is this beloved hero American who is Arab/German-American...Reconcile THAT is what it's trying to tell you.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Trial Lawyer
07:09 AM on 10/10/2011
Except that Steve Jobs was in no meaningful way an Arab.
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Baghooli
Immortals!
11:16 PM on 10/07/2011
Funny how few Israelis regard their heritage in such high regard even do, majority of them are Slavic and yet they can't even acknowledge that Arabs do have right to be proud with dignity even on such non-important issue of Mr. Jobs DNA lineage!
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jayrag123
as salaam 3laykum
10:21 PM on 10/07/2011
Those Syrian genes are what made jobs run his company like a dictator.................
07:49 PM on 10/07/2011
There are lots of under the radar arab amaericans

Ralph Nader for instance
And obviously he is someone who is much easier to support from a moral standpoint than Jobs, who had pretty terrible business practices
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Mando1
01:08 PM on 10/07/2011
Now here is a story you will NEVER hear on Fox "News".....
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Rianna
09:29 AM on 10/07/2011
This was indeed a sad story. For a father never to have known of his child's birth, and then for whatever reason could not connect with that child, is such a loss, for both. No one will ever know what really happened in that family. The adopted parents did a great job, and should get a lot of credit for taking in a baby, and doing a great job bringing him up to be such a great achiever who contributed so much to the world. The biological father should be proud of his child - for whatever the circumstances are, it was his DNA that contributed to making a genius. At the end of the day, Steve Job's Arab/German genes, plus his adopted parent's nurturing, made him who he is. As much as some may keep trying to insist that his Arab connection is insignificant here, the bottom line is, no one can change their genetic makeup, and it is part of your existence, whether or not you like it.
09:08 AM on 10/07/2011
Jobs was quoted as saying his "adoptive" parents were his "only parents", so I think his views should be honored. His parents were Armenian-American and apparently Jobs grew up speaking Armenian. That is also a heritage to be very proud of, particularly as his mother was a descendant of survivors of the Armenian genocide.
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horhay
Res ipsa loquitur
03:37 AM on 10/07/2011
Thanks for the great article. I had heard Jobs was adopted but I didn't know what his genetic heritage was. I'd say the parents that adopted and raised Steve did an outstanding job.
02:50 AM on 10/07/2011
Steve Jobs was an American 1st and foremost !
01:02 PM on 10/07/2011
Steve Jobs was an individual. no country gets a share of his accomplishments.

Do you think the Bills are for real.
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jessjesskk
Benevolent Zombie Power
12:49 AM on 10/07/2011
And it's funny how successful he has been without having to say in front of the world "those are my origins I am proud... blah blah".... maybe let's think about ourself as part of humanity rather as part of a specific subsection, and things will be much smoother and better... let's adapt to the place we live instead of absolutely wanting to have this place adapt to what our parents were educated in.
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Tasies
03:31 PM on 10/07/2011
Surely, but with all the demonization of Arabs going around, it is within the scope of reason to point out a positive example of Arab American accomplishment, regardless of Steve's choice of not identifying with his Arab make up.
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Rianna
04:14 PM on 10/07/2011
I agree. I can see that this is a positive example of Arab American accomplishment. You cannot shake off nor deny your genetic make up. It must have been a great Arab/German combination, plus the nurturing of his adopted parents, for Steve Jobs to become the genius to contributed so much to this world. There would be some races out there, who would have been flaunting it, if he had been one of their own. :))
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cdncommentator
11:09 PM on 10/06/2011
Steve Jobs' father is Paul Jobs. That is the man who raised him, who provided for him, who sat by his bedside when he was sick, who helped him with his homework, who played catch with him, who cooked him meals, gave him love, yelled at him in exaspiration, and devoted his life to him.

This Syrian-born gentlement is merely the biological provider of half of Steve Jobs' genetics. No small contribution, but not a father. He is not at fault. It just is what it is.

As such, while Jobs may share some genetic material with some Syrians, he didn't identify as Syrian or Arab, he didn't grow up in a Syrian or Arab home, he didn't grow up Muslim, and he has no connection to it in his heart.

I feel sorry that this Syrian gentleman always wanted to meet his famous and successful progeny but couldn't bring himself to write a letter to the adult Jobs. His loss.

But make no mistake that Jobs had a father, a true father, in the fullest sense of that word. And that man's name was Paul.
Nightangle
NPA - no party affiliation
11:07 PM on 10/06/2011
I know very little of his familial background, but from what I learned through the years, at least from age 14, he rarely spoke of his Arabic heritage. Also, I know very little about his own family - his wife. I was just so engrossed with his genius. He was always been a private person. People respected that.

That Generation - Jobs, Woszniak . . . . I hope there will be more of them reincarnated from generations yet unborn.

The narrative says Steve Jobs had relationships with her half sister, so he must have known his own Arabic background. Someone here noted that truth is stranger than fiction - so true. Fate is what it is - a Genius came to this world from bitter sweet love story like Romeo and Juliet. I would have never guessed fate's sad but beautiful twist.

Regardless, and for whatever reason, I am quite surprise that I feel some tremendous pride of that mixture of Syrian-Arabic-American-geniology that produced a genius I so admired in my teens. I do not know personally any Arab, only what is going on in Syria. That makes me sad.

Even now at 29, I will never fully understand the legacy he left in this world, most specially to me - and my generation.

Here is to that Syrina-Arabic-American Genius !
09:23 PM on 10/06/2011
Thank you for this information.
Imagine what Steve Jobs could have done
in exploring, organizing and decoding
the translation of the Holy Quran - from the original Arabic -
taking in its' divergence in the "inspired" versus the "literal" translation.
Steve's work in exploring and organizing the systems of computers
and how they operate -
mirrors the 'gathering from the four corners' the elements which are the
essential in assembling the words which operate to a certain effect.
All scripture operates this way actually..
Imagine what Steve could have accomplished in this
realm of abstract thought and work!
Thank you again.
Pauline Jaing
Artist, worker, mother
08:31 PM on 10/06/2011
Fascinating story! Thank you so much! This is a sad story that is also so glad -- one of those stories of a paradoxical, complicated set of lives that is far more typical than we mortals usually like to acknowledge.