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Pakistani-Born Mayor Repairs, and Wins, Texans' Hearts

PARIS, TEXAS —
This charming, droopy city needed new fire trucks not long ago, but,
like many American municipalities today, couldn’t necessarily afford
them. The mayor, a small-government Republican, dithered: to buy or not
to buy? He turned to the natural choice for advice on running a Texan
city: Pervez Musharraf, the exiled ex-president of Pakistan.



Mr. Musharraf may seem an unlikely adviser to the mayor of a Southern
town where crickets chirp shrilly and the leafy streets are dominated by
places pledging to fix your truck. But even more unlikely is the man he
advised: Mayor Arjumand Hashmi, a Pakistani-born cardiologist who has
become one of the United States’ most improbable politicians.



He is like the opening line of a joke: “So a Texan, a Muslim, a
Republican, a doctor and the mayor of Paris are sitting at a bar ...”
Except that he is, by himself, all of the people in the joke.



America seems to be an ever more divided, bitter country. Lost amid
those divisions is the story of how a down-on-its-luck town in Texas
struck its own little blow for unity. A little more than a year ago,
this city of 25,000 — overwhelmingly white and Christian — made a Muslim
outsider their mayor. (Dr. Hashmi had campaigned to be one of seven
city councilors and, having won, was voted mayor by the council.)



The mayor swept into office with an immigrant’s zeal: planting hundreds
of crepe myrtle trees on the loop around the city; surprising local
agencies with impromptu visits during his lunch hour; interrupting the
“brother-in-law deals,” as they’re called in the South, that gave
contracts to the wrong people; using tax abatements to lure businesses
to Paris.



All this while serving as a cardiologist and leader of a local hospital
catheterization laboratory that is often the only thing standing between
the chicken-fried steaks that patients keep on eating and the deaths
they nonetheless wish to defer.



Which is why Dr. Hashmi, who is in his early 50s, wakes up at 3:30 a.m.
most days. He prays the first of his customary three daily prayers. (He
maxes out to the prescribed five when he can, but says he’s pretty sure
Allah wouldn’t want him stopping to pray when he’s got a catheter up
someone’s groin.) Then he alternates throughout the day between doctor
and mayor, doctor and mayor.



At 10:53 a.m. on a recent morning, wearing a muscle T-shirt and cowboy
boots and clutching two phones, he rushed into a hospital lounge and
dictated a report. His next patient wasn’t ready, so he got in his BMW
(he’s also got a Bentley and a Lamborghini and many other cars) and
drove to his mechanic to check on the black S.U.V. he plans to use to
host visiting dignitaries. Ten minutes later, he was again at the
hospital, pumping dark dye into a sedated woman’s heart, searching for
blockages. Fifteen minutes later, he was inspecting Paris’s water plant.



When he was first running, the town erupted with all the predictable
whispers: that he was trying to drive Christianity out of Paris, that he
was a rich doctor trying to buy the town, that he would build a mosque,
that he was a terrorist.



Today he has won over much of the city. (His first council election was
4-3 in his favor; he was re-elected this year 7-0.) Local citizens speak
of him variously as a blood transfusion and a breath of fresh air, even
though some in the old guard retain their anxieties.



Part of his strategy has been to embrace his newness to the city, where he arrived in 2006 after many years in Tampa, Florida. He
says that, because he is an outsider, no one in Paris is his cousin or
classmate, and that he is thus free to govern by reason. He says he is
trying to save the city from the cronyism that he has seen strangle his
own country: “In most of third world countries, yes, there are rules and
laws and regulations. But it ends up that related people get things
done,” he said. He saw that same phenomenon afflicting Paris. “I have
lived it personally and seen why it doesn’t work,” he said.



U.S. politicians are wont to conceal the complexity and worldliness in
their backgrounds — as with Mitt Romney’s ability to speak French or
President Barack Obama’s early years in Indonesia. Dr. Hashmi takes a
different approach, speaking Urdu to friends or family in front of his
colleagues, answering the phones with “Salaam aleikum” at times and at
times with “How ya doin’?” His Pakistani accent remains strong.



Just after 11 p.m. that same night, after a full day’s work twice over,
he was sitting on a sofa at home with his family and some friends,
nibbling on flaky cookies specially bought in Lahore.



His beeper sounded. A middle-aged man was at the hospital with chest pains, and the emergency room doctor wanted his advice. He asked for an
electrocardiogram to be texted to his iPhone. When he saw it, he
concluded that the man needed him. He told the doctor to prepare the
catheter, and he drove away down a dark country road into his Paris.
He asked for an
electrocardiogram to be texted to his iPhone. When he saw it, he
concluded that the man needed him. He told the doctor to prepare the
catheter, and he drove away down a dark country road into his Paris.
Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/national-political-issues/199117-pakistani-born-mayor-repairs-wins-texans-hearts.html#ixzz229MtMsA2

 
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Added: Jul-30-2012 Occurred On: Jul-30-2012
By: Pakistani
In:
Other Middle East
Tags: Pakistani-Born Mayor Repairs, and Wins, Texans' Hearts
Location: Pakistan (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 2798 | Comments: 11 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
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  • A democrat would take the firetruck to a title max

    Posted Jul-30-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Comment of user 'Stoner_Simpson' has been deleted by author!
  • "This charming, droopy city needed new fire trucks not long ago, but,
    like many American municipalities today, couldn’t necessarily afford
    them."

    ONCE AGAIN, you are trying your hardest to bash America! Your people are still shitting in the streets, run down cities, roads you can't drive on, sponsors of terror, animals running freely in the streets. Homeless sleeping in the gutters!!! So, before you BACH my country. YOU BETTER TAKE A CLOSE FUCKING LOOKS AT YOUR OWN!!!!!

    Posted Jul-30-2012 By 

    (1)

  • He owns a BMW a Bently and a Lamborghini?

    Headline should read:

    'Pakistani Born Cardiologist In Texas Thanks Allah That America Has Made It Possible To Suceed And Own High Priced Vehicles and Live The Way He Wants Instead of Living in Pakistan Which Obviously He Does Not Want To Live In For Reasons He Does Not Really Want To Explain At This Time In His Life'
    '

    Posted Jul-30-2012 By 

    (1)

  • It's all part of their plan...

    Posted Jul-30-2012 By 

    (0)

  • I'm already planning my sanctions in case they start enriching uranium...

    Posted Jul-30-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Strange and interesting article.

    Posted Jul-31-2012 By 

    (0)

  • A doctor, a religious man, a successful businessman, knows how to run a city better than a life-long politician? I'm surprised it was reported on at all.

    He didn't build that...oh wait.

    Posted Jul-31-2012 By 

    (0)