The Ali Hindy Story: A Muslim Immigrant in 20th Century America
Ali Hindy was among a handful of Muslims who joined thousands of Christians fleeing Syria in the 1890s, when the Ottoman Empire was crumbling, and Syria was mired in a depression. He was 12 years old when he sailed from Haifa with two boys and found his way through Europe to New York City. Ali Hindy drove a horse and wagon west with two goals: to find a wife and start a business. He married a woman who had been shunned by her family and started a general store, a bathhouse for coal miners and a movie theater in Bloody Mingo County, West Virginia. He sided with the United Mine Workers in their many battles with mine owners, befriended Devilance Hatfield of the Hatfield-McCoys Feud and survived an attack by the Ku Klux Klan. Ali Hindy proudly became an American citizen in 1924 but his children were raised Christian and learned nothing of Ali’s religion, language or culture. That was left for his grandchildren and great-grandchildren to discover. His grandson, Steve Hindy, became a Middle East Correspondent for The Associated Press, based in Beirut and Cairo 1979-1984. He traveled to Ali’s hometown, Sultan Yaqoub, met Ali’s half-sister and other family members and cobbled together this story with help from Hindy cousins in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio.
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The Ali Hindy Story: A Muslim Immigrant in 20th Century America
Ali Hindy was among a handful of Muslims who joined thousands of Christians fleeing Syria in the 1890s, when the Ottoman Empire was crumbling, and Syria was mired in a depression. He was 12 years old when he sailed from Haifa with two boys and found his way through Europe to New York City. Ali Hindy drove a horse and wagon west with two goals: to find a wife and start a business. He married a woman who had been shunned by her family and started a general store, a bathhouse for coal miners and a movie theater in Bloody Mingo County, West Virginia. He sided with the United Mine Workers in their many battles with mine owners, befriended Devilance Hatfield of the Hatfield-McCoys Feud and survived an attack by the Ku Klux Klan. Ali Hindy proudly became an American citizen in 1924 but his children were raised Christian and learned nothing of Ali’s religion, language or culture. That was left for his grandchildren and great-grandchildren to discover. His grandson, Steve Hindy, became a Middle East Correspondent for The Associated Press, based in Beirut and Cairo 1979-1984. He traveled to Ali’s hometown, Sultan Yaqoub, met Ali’s half-sister and other family members and cobbled together this story with help from Hindy cousins in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio.
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The Ali Hindy Story: A Muslim Immigrant in 20th Century America

The Ali Hindy Story: A Muslim Immigrant in 20th Century America

by Steve Hindy
The Ali Hindy Story: A Muslim Immigrant in 20th Century America

The Ali Hindy Story: A Muslim Immigrant in 20th Century America

by Steve Hindy

Hardcover

$24.95 
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Overview

Ali Hindy was among a handful of Muslims who joined thousands of Christians fleeing Syria in the 1890s, when the Ottoman Empire was crumbling, and Syria was mired in a depression. He was 12 years old when he sailed from Haifa with two boys and found his way through Europe to New York City. Ali Hindy drove a horse and wagon west with two goals: to find a wife and start a business. He married a woman who had been shunned by her family and started a general store, a bathhouse for coal miners and a movie theater in Bloody Mingo County, West Virginia. He sided with the United Mine Workers in their many battles with mine owners, befriended Devilance Hatfield of the Hatfield-McCoys Feud and survived an attack by the Ku Klux Klan. Ali Hindy proudly became an American citizen in 1924 but his children were raised Christian and learned nothing of Ali’s religion, language or culture. That was left for his grandchildren and great-grandchildren to discover. His grandson, Steve Hindy, became a Middle East Correspondent for The Associated Press, based in Beirut and Cairo 1979-1984. He traveled to Ali’s hometown, Sultan Yaqoub, met Ali’s half-sister and other family members and cobbled together this story with help from Hindy cousins in West Virginia, Kentucky and Ohio.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798987208441
Publisher: Seapoint Books and Media
Publication date: 09/30/2025
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Steve Hindy was a Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press, serving in Beirut and Cairo. He covered the Hostage Crisis in Iran, the Iran-Iraq War, and wars in Lebanon and Syria and he witnessed the assassination of Egypt’s Anwar Sadat. He learned to make home-brewed beer from US diplomats who had been posted in Saudi Arabia, where alcoholic beverages are forbidden. When he returned to New York, he co-founded Brooklyn Brewery, a craft beer brand sold all over the world. Hindy is the author of “Beer School” and “The Craft Beer Revolution”. Now retired, he lives in Brooklin, Maine.
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