Florida sheriff helps rescue 33 relatives of deputy from Afghanistan | Metaglossia: The Translation World | Scoop.it
The Sarasota County Sheriff's Office is helping Deputy Mubarak bring 33 relatives here from Afghanistan. Mubarak served as an interpreter.

SARASOTA COUNTY – A Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office deputy who had worked with U.S. Special Forces as a translator was able to get 33 of 34 of his family members out of Afghanistan and into the United States prior to the Aug. 31 troop withdrawal deadline. 

He now has a goal of bringing his relatives – who are currently in Fort Bliss, Texas – to Sarasota. 

 

“Individually for me, for the family, it has been a big relief; they’re out of harm's way, they’re safe here, in addition to that they can pursue their future dreams,” said sheriff’s Deputy Mubarak in a Friday morning joint interview, along with Sarasota County Sheriff Kurt Hoffman. “They can be anyone they want to be, as long as they do the work.” 

Mubarak’s first name is not being published for security reasons. 

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“When the Taliban took over, it was very hard for me,” Mubarak said. “I thought it would be would be quick retribution, quick revenge. 

“I was pleased and I was honored to work with the Marine Corps in the past and I tried to contact the Marine Corp, the defense department and that’s how I was able to get them out of Afghanistan.” 

 

Mubarak is equally appreciative of the way the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office family has embraced him and Hoffman’s immediate efforts to help. 

“It’s a big thing, it’s huge,” Mubarak said. “I can see the value in this teamwork, in this agency’s family this agency's a community.  

“I am a new deputy and I feel honored and privileged that our sheriff is going out to do everything to help a new member of this community.” 

Mubarak, 39, served as a translator alongside Hoffman’s cousin, Col. Randy Hoffman, a retired Marine. 

Col. Hoffman, who first met Mubarak and his brother in 2003, while he was a Marine Corps captain, said the two men were like a brother to him, and Mubarak helped him navigate the culture. 

“His understanding of Pashtun tribal culture, his understanding of the little nuances that I would not pick up on, either in a meeting or driving down the road or looking at the faces or the children’s expressions in a village – he could immediately tell me if something was right or wrong,” Col. Hoffman said in a Zoom interview. “On several occasions, I’m sure more than 10, I’m sure his decision saved not only my life but saved the lives of other Special Forces operators.” 

 

Deputy is head of family after father's death during Kabul evacuation

Mubarak moved to Sarasota in December 2020, was sponsored to attend the law enforcement academy in March 2021, was hired by the Sheriff’s Office April 2 and completed the law enforcement academy in June. He won awards in academics and physical fitness. 

He is finishing the field training program at the Sheriff’s Office and lives in Sarasota with his wife and four children. 

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Sheriff Hoffman worked on behalf of the deputy and his family with the Marine Corps and U.S. Sen. Rick Scott and others to bring Mubarak’s family to the U.S. 

They are currently being processed with Special Immigrant Visas through the U.S. State Department. 

Mubarak’s father died of an apparent heart attack while preparing to get to the airport in Kabul. 

That left the deputy, as the elder in his family, responsible for their well-being as they arrive in Sarasota. 

The majority of his family are from rural villages in eastern Afghanistan and arrived in the U.S. with little more than the clothes on their backs. 

In Florida:Afghan refugees have found a home in Florida, hoping for a 'peaceful and calm' life

Sarasota community helping raise funds

Hoffman and Mubarak established a GoFundMe page that should be active sometime Friday at https://www.gofundme.com/f/afghan-interpreter-family-relocation-mission

Sheriff Hoffman started that off with a $1,000 donation. 

 

“They're going to need a lot of assistance when they get here,” Hoffman said. “As you could imagine, there’s going to be a culture shock, we’re going to need housing, clothing, food.

“They are a hard-working people, as is Deputy Mubarak."

They’re already asking about jobs. 

“I know this community; I’ve lived here for 40 years; they will rally and they will support us,” he added. “I hope they go to that GoFundMe page and put a few dollars in for a guy who has stood with our military for a number of years and protected our military. 

‘Now its’s our turn to give back and help his family.” 

Hoffman has been working with the Sheriff's Office chief financial officer to create an Afghan Refugees Fund to help them get settled. 

At least one local congregation, Church of the Redeemer, has raised $60,000 for that effort, and presented the sheriff's office with a check Friday afternoon. 

The Rev. Charleston D. Wilson of The Church of The Redeemer said at least another $20,000 has been raised among the parish. 

Wilson said this is the type of outreach he had been praying about, as it demonstrates the connectivity of the human family. 

“All of a sudden something very national became very local and to use an overused word, it got real instantly,” said Wilson, who learned about the sheriff’s effort through an email forwarded by one of his parishioners. “We had a local connection to an an international tragedy. 

“We took that as a sign from God.” 

In all, Mubarak is now responsible for the well-being of five separate family groups. 

The first consists of two parents with four children ages 25, 24, 20, and 16; the second consists of two parents with three children ages 20, 18, and 5; the third consists of two parents with seven children ages 6, 12, 14, 15, 16, 16, and 17; the fourth consists of two parents with eight children ages 2, 5, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, and 12. 

The fifth family are Mubarak’s brother and two sisters – all three are adults without children.

A father's blessing

With the blessing of their father Mubarak and his brother both became interpreters for the U.S. military. 

“They saved a lot of lives, over the 15 years or so they worked with Special Operations,” Hoffman said. 

Because of his work Special Forces and Col. Hoffman, Deputy Mubarak was granted U.S. citizenship. Army Gen. David McKiernan, who was then commander of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan, wrote a special immigration letter that led to Mubarak entering the United States and he later brought his wife two children. 

He worked at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and went on to spend time in Quantico, Virginia, and Twentynine Palms and Camp Pendleton in California. 

While working with the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Mubarak trained Marines about interacting with members of the Afghan community, as well as understanding the Afghan culture, while using a mock Afghan village as an immersive training ground. 

Following his work at Camp Pendleton, he went on a deployment from 2010 to 2011 in southern Afghanistan. 

Upon his return, he moved to Indiana, earned both a bachelor's degree and a master’s degree in Central Eurasian Studies and became graduate teaching assistant. 

Learning English with a British accent

Mubarak and his younger brother learned English through The HALO Trust, a non-governmental organization dedicated to removing landmines after the former Soviet Union pulled out of Afghanistan in 1988. 

The late Princess Diana raised the profile of the organization in 1997, when she waked through one of HALO’s minefields in Angola. 

The work of the HALO Trust was key to allowing people to farm and grow food. 

“Being a member of that NGO was seen as valuable, as something that you could contribute more to the community, to the people,” Mubarak said. 

 

On the first day Mubarak and his brother attended class with The HALO Trust, they were already a week late. Mubarak got a zero on a quiz and contemplated not continuing. 

His father, who was passionate about education, saw those studies as key for his sons’ futures. 

“It was my dad that constantly encouraged me not only to learn but he would picture the future for me,” Mubarak said, noting that picture would include wearing blue jeans and knowing what he was doing. 

“The gate to this success will be English language and English language would take you there.” 

Mubarak can speak six languages, but it was his fluency in English – complete with a British accent – that led another interpreter to recommend Mubarak and his brother to then-Capt. Randy Hoffman as both an interpreter and cultural guide. 

That cooperation with the U.S. military made it imperative for Mubarak’s family to leave Afghanistan once the Taliban assumed control of the country. 

“Back in 2003, his family was identified by the Taliban as a supporter of the United States and the United States military. Once you’re listed as a supporter, you’re automatically in danger,” Col. Hoffman said. "I would expect most of his family would be killed or they would have no future in an Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. 

“It would be extremely difficult for his brothers-in-law to even be alive and his sister and sisters-in-law may very well have been given as brides to the Taliban.” 

An accelerated timetable

Efforts to get Mubarak’s family were already underway but the timetable was accelerated once the Taliban entered Kabul. 

“It’s been kind of a full-court press,” Sheriff Hoffman said. “We’ve enlisted Sen. Rick Scott’s office, we’ve reached out to the Marine Corps, we’ve reached out to the State Department. Both Deputy Mubarak and I have had some late-night phone calls because obviously it’s a 12-hour time difference there. 

“Fortunately, his family was able to make it onto the airport,” Hoffman continued. “After several attempts at trying to get past Taliban checkpoints, they hooked up with someone who was an interpreter on the other side of the fence (who) called out their name, they heard their name called, they made their way towards that particular gate. 

“Fortunately for us the Taliban guard who was at that gate stepped aside and let them on to the base. It’s nothing short of a miracle.” 

 

Because his extended family is still living on a military base, Mubarak doesn’t plan to visit and is waiting for them to arrive in Sarasota for a long-overdue reunion. 

“We can’t wait to see each other,” he said. “I haven’t seen my sister in 13 years, so this is going to be huge and a big thing.  

"I won’t be able to recognize most of my nieces; I haven’t seen them in 13 years,” he added. “I know they know me and I know them by name.” 

It means a lot to Mubarak that his family can get a fresh start in the United States. 

One of his nephews is of high school age, and his sister already asked if he can be enrolled in school in Texas. 

“It gives them this feeling of confidence and freedom and opportunity in enrolling their children without fear and sending them to school,” Mubarak said. 

“I wish I knew when I first came to the states, I wish I knew how big the American Dream was, how big the opportunities we have in the states are. 

“And I’m glad I have that now and I’ll be able to share that with them,” he added. “I'm very excited to see them and once again I’m grateful for the Sheriff’s Office help.” 

Interested?

To contribute to the Afghan Interpreter Family Relocation Initiative, visit https://www.gofundme.com/f/afghan-interpreter-family-relocation-mission.

Earle Kimel primarily covers south Sarasota County for the Herald-Tribune and can be reached at earle.kimel@heraldtribune.com. Support local journalism with a digital subscription to the Herald-Tribune.