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Dr. Amaal V.E. Tokars
has spent her professional career working in the diverse
arena of human services and is the author of the upcoming
book, America & Iraq: Seduced By Fear.
She has committed much time and research to topics
related to leadership and policy.
Her interests range from adult education and community
development to crisis intervention, crisis response,
and cultural competence. Dr. Tokars is Canadian, Iraqi,
a citizen of the United States and has been educated
in the United States.
She resides in the Chicago area with her husband and
two sons. It is her hope that her work will promote
dialogue on the meaning of citizenship in a global
society. She hopes that all citizens will be valued
as having a voice in the shaping of their own history.
Amaal means “many hopes” in Arabic.
Following
is an excerpt from an interview taken in May 2006
Good evening, Dr. Tokars. Tell us, where did you
grow up?
Good evening and please call me Amaal. I was born
in Ontario, Canada. My mother is Iraqi-born and my
father is US-born. I became a naturalized citizen
of the United States when my mother gained her citizenship.
She was educated in the Chicago area.
Tell us about your family…(married? kids?
etc.)
I am married to my best friend and have two sons.
That is so refreshing to hear that you married
your best friend! Tell me, Amaal, when you were a
child, what did you hope to do when you grew up?
When I was young, I was very interested in topics
related to the human sciences and in studying history.
As a college student I found myself being keenly interested
in the relationship between the human condition and
the historical condition. I studied sociology and
minored in history. After my undergrad, I did research
in the corporate sector, but yearned to delve more
deeply into areas related to leadership, policy, and
social change. I completed graduate school, including
a doctoral degree. I studied Family Science with an
emphasis on marriage and family therapy. I concluded
my formal education with a degree in adult education
and a cognate in anthropology.
What are your hobbies/interests?
My interests very much continue to be related to the
nurturing of my sons, the nurturing of all those who
I serve through my work, and the nurturing of meaningful
social change. I also refresh myself through the preparation
of good food, through the innocent radiance of animals
and nature, and through time spent with dear friends.
My interests are the recreation of daily life.
How did you become a Human Services Administrator?
I was doing research in the corporate sector and was
preparing to have a family. I became keenly aware
that I wanted to work and stay home with my children.
I made a career change from the corporate realm to
the human services realm. I gave up my directorship
for an evening position, and took a significant cut
in pay. I eventually went from being a counselor in
the human services realm, to being manager, to being
director, to being administrator.
What is most interesting about your work?
What is most satisfying to me about my work is that
I am blessed to be working with such beautiful people
who are so honored to be serving others. It is most
pleasing to me to know that such work can be very
effective in contributing to the well-being of families,
in contributing to the well-being of community, and
in creating space for social change. It has been quite
impressive to me that I have met so many people over
the years who make a relatively modest income and
continue to be inspired by those they seek to serve.
What was one of the most interesting places that
you have traveled to?
I have traveled to many places in the world. Even
more than the spectacular geography, I have been privileged
to interact with diverse world cultures. Each race
of people are equally precious and all possess their
own beauty. I have been particularly struck by the
graceful handsomeness of Spain, the harmonious marriage
of modernism and tradition manifested in Japan, and
the magnificent society that was Iraq.
If there were anything that people didn’t
know you are, what would you say?
I ran men’s cross-country in high school.
Is there any cause that you feel passionately
about?
I feel passionately about causes that contribute to
or take away from social justice and, consequently,
from the well-being of the human condition.
What was one of the most significant events of
the 80s?
As a child, I was starkly awakened during the time
of the Iranian Hostage Crisis to the profound relationship
between text and image. It has not left me since.
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