Hala Gorani.Photo:Pierre Suu/WireImage

Pierre Suu/WireImage
Former CNN anchor Hala Gorani says that, while she grew up in the U.S. in an Arabic-Syrian family, she hid much of her Arabic identity to avoid being discriminated against.
“That was a very deliberate move on my part,” Gorani tells the network. “When I was in my 20s — so this was in the ’90s in Paris, I had just graduated from a pretty elite university in France thinking, ‘Okay, this is kind of going to be an easy journey now.’ "
She continues: “So I put together my resumé, and on the resumé was my name, Hala Basha … and I had Arabic as a spoken language, and I wasn’t getting any call-backs. And so one of my friends from school said, ‘Listen, I would recommend that you remove the Arabic.”
So, she did, removing many of the references to her Arabic ancestry.
“So I removed that. I took Gorani, which was a Western-sounding name,” she tells CNN. “I added a photo, [I’m] blonde and blue-eyed, don’t look Arab, and I removed the fact that I spoke Arabic, which is grotesque, because it’s an asset. It should not be seen as a liability.”
Hala Gorani.Shawn Thew/EPA/Shutterstock

Shawn Thew/EPA/Shutterstock
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Currently a correspondent for NBC News, Gorani previously anchored CNN’sHala Gorani Tonight.
The Emmy award-winning journalist is the author of the new book,But You Don’t Look Arab: And Other Tales of Unbelonging, which details hertime as a war correspondent and news anchor as well as her own search for identity as the daughter of Syrian immigrants.
source: people.com