(I've been shopping here ever since I moved into my building 3 blocks 
north on Third Ave in 1979. You have to be careful, however, because 
they are price-gougers to some extent. I never paid much attention to 
the people working there but they always struck me as ethnically diverse 
and a bit distant. It turns out that they are mostly refugees from 
places torn by war and political persecution. I guess that compensates 
for the price-gouging, at least in my book.)

NY Times, Nov. 18 2015
A Manhattan Hardware Store Welcomes Refugees as Governors Vow to Shut 
Them Out
About New York
By JIM DWYER

Chris Christie of New Jersey and at least 25 other governors have said 
they do not want Syrian refugees to come to their states.

Then again, there is Wankel’s, a family-owned hardware store that opened 
on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in the 19th century. For decades, it 
has hired people who came to the United States fleeing violence and 
persecution.

“People coming from really bad situations, trying to make a better life 
in America,” said Sean Wankel, 32, vice president of Wankel’s. “Or a life.”

The refugees come to Wankel’s through resettlement agencies like 
Catholic Charities or the International Rescue Committee and stay for a 
few months or years as they get their bearings in a new world. On a wall 
map, colored pins mark the three dozen countries from which the Wankel 
workers have come.

Felix Royce, 39, started in the store two months ago. Like many before 
him, he is new to retail work; in Nigeria, he had been a pastor and an 
author. He said the picture on his book jacket made him a target of the 
Boko Haram, a murderous sect of anti-Western Islamists who rose in a 
swamp of official corruption and violence. Among Boko Haram’s infamous 
atrocities was the kidnapping of scores of schoolgirls in 2014.

“They organize mock street fights and send little kids with suicide 
bombs,” Mr. Royce said. “ISIS is more sensible than Boko Haram. You 
would have insiders, police officers and politicians who collaborate 
with the Boko Haram. You didn’t know who to trust.”

In fear of his life, he said, he made his way to Houston and applied for 
asylum, appearing without a lawyer three times in front of immigration 
judges before being formally admitted to the United States. He, his wife 
and their two children now live in the Bronx, aided by the International 
Rescue Committee.

“I am sitting here,” he said, “trying to put my life together. We are 
just trying to find our feet.”

Mr. Royce said he had been closely following the news of the attacks in 
Paris on Friday evening by bombers and gunmen connected to the Islamic 
State, also called ISIS or ISIL.

A tiny fraction of the refugees leaving Syria have been permitted into 
the United States — fewer than nine a week between Oct. 1, 2011, and 
Sept. 30 of this year, a total of 1,854 — as an estimated four million 
people fled the deteriorating nation. President Obama said the United 
States would accept 10,000 refugees from Syria in the coming fiscal 
year. Republicans in Congress and in statehouses are objecting, saying 
that terrorists like those involved in the Paris attacks could 
camouflage themselves in the stream of legitimate refugees.

Representative Paul D. Ryan, Republican of Wisconsin, the newly 
inaugurated House speaker, called for a “pause” in the refugee 
resettlement program. Mr. Christie, seeking the Republican presidential 
nomination, released a letter he sent to the president.

“I write to inform you that I will not accept any refugees from Syria in 
the wake of the deadly terrorist attack in Paris,” he wrote, saying 
federal screening procedures were inadequate. “Neither you nor any 
federal official can guarantee that Syrian refugees will not be part of 
any terroristic activity.”

New Yorkers might imagine police barricades being set up around the 
World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, to prevent people from fleeing the 
collapsing towers because no one could guarantee they would not be part 
of any future terroristic activity.

It is not clear whether Mr. Christie or any other governor can refuse to 
“accept” refugees. As a practical matter, New Jersey does not have 
border controls, and probably could not set up traffic lanes for 
citizenship papers at places like the Lincoln Tunnel.

Other Republican candidates, including Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush, said they 
would permit Christian refugees from Syria, but not Muslims.

At the hardware store where he has found work, in a city where he and 
his family have taken refuge, Mr. Royce was polite in assessing the 
proposed restrictions.

“Some people are saying, let them be, let them stay there,” he said. “I 
wouldn’t subscribe to that. There are innocent ones out there. This 
would mean there is no hope for them. If you screen, there are good ones 
among the bad. Everyone from Syria is not from ISIS. If you leave 
everybody, ISIS will take advantage of them.”

Mr. Wankel was asked if his business had room for Syrian refugees.

“Certainly,” he said. “If they are coming through the International 
Rescue Committee or Catholic Charities, I’d do it. They have a tough 
life. If I was in Syria, I’d want to get the heck out.”

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