Chicagoland Arab American journalist buried after succumbing to COVID-19

Mansour Tadros
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Updated 07 April 2020
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Chicagoland Arab American journalist buried after succumbing to COVID-19

  • Newspaper publisher was constantly helping people and needy families using his own resources and funds

CHICAGO: Jordanian American newspaper publisher Mansour Tadros, who died on Mar. 28 at the age of 70 after falling ill with a suspected case of COVID-19, was buried on Tuesday.

His funeral was unusual, given the precautionary measures to slow the spread of the pandemic. Only close family could attend a memorial service at Lawn Funeral Home in Tinley Park, Illinois. Restrictions imposed by the state’s governor, J. B. Pritzker, meant that other friends, relatives and mourners had to wait outside in their cars.

After the service, more than 70 vehicles formed a funeral procession that drove past Tadros’s home and on to Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Worth, the final resting place of many of Chicago’s Christian Arabs.

The interment ceremony was likewise limited to immediate family, a priest and employees of the funeral home, all wearing face masks.

When the service was completed, the family members got into their cars and the other mourners paid their final respects by driving slowly past. Tadros’s sons, Fadi and Faris, acknowledged them from inside their car.

“We are so grateful to everyone who attended,” said Mansour’s sobbing wife, Lidya, who sat in a car with her daughter, Nadine, as the mourners went by, offering their condolences. “This is so difficult for us.”

Tadros, a cofounder of the National Arab American Journalists Association, was a giant in the Arab American journalism community. According to NAAJA, the Arab American and Muslim print media in America was badly affected by the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001, with many Arab ethnic and Muslim publications forced to close due to discrimination.

This prompted Tadros to launch The Future News in 2002. He advocated for more to be done to educate Americans about the true face of Arab culture, and highlight the fact that it is rich, diverse and embedded in the foundations of many great achievements of mankind, including science, math and language.

However, it was a struggle to keep his newspaper financially afloat and he often paid the publication costs out of his own pocket. Last year he shifted the operation to online-only.

One of his priorities was to make The Future News the “newspaper of record” for Chicago’s Arab American community, which began to settle in the city following the 1893 World’s Fair.

Tadros and his parents immigrated to the US in 1968 from Na’ur, a suburb of Amman in Jordan. He was very active in the Jordanian American and Palestinian American communities. Many of those who knew and worked with him paid tribute to his life and work.

“Mansour was a man that lived and worked constantly on behalf of our Arab American community,” said Nemer Ziyad, CEO of Ziyad Brothers Importing, “That was his life and that will be his legacy.

“He had no boundaries, no matter where in the Arab world someone was from, nor what religion they were. He was always about the community and always on the front line with any situation, even financially.”

he added that Tadros was “constantly helping people and families,” often dipping into his own resources and funds to do so.

“He was always helping people in need,” Ziyad said. “Mansour was an iconic man. He was respected in our community and by many others for his work. And he was loved by all he touched. He will be missed. His passing is a major loss to our community and society. He will never be forgotten.”

Marie Newman, who recently unseated incumbent Dan Lipinski in the Democratic Primary for Illinois’s 3rd Congressional District, recalled how he had helped and advised her.

“I am heartbroken about Mansour,” she said. “He was a great counselor and mentor to me. I will miss our long conversations. This a huge loss for all.”

The Future News endorsed Newman in the hotly contested congressional race. After her victory, Tadros predicted she would be a champion of civil rights for all residents, including Arab Americans.

St. Mary’s Orthodox Church Pastor Malek Rihani described Tadros as a man of faith.

“I’ve had the pleasure of working with Mansour a few times, and his focus has always been finding ways to strengthen our community by giving us a voice through his gift of journalism,” he said.

Tadros also worked closely with the Arab American Democratic Club (. Its chairman, Samir Khalil, said: “I knew Mansour and his parents and siblings for 50 years. I talked to him on the phone the night before his passing; he was in good spirits talking about Marie Newman winning, how happy he was and looking forward to helping unite the community.

“Mansour and I were active in college together as he was my schoolmate, and we kept working together, supporting each other to support the community for the past 50 years, on many occasions. I wish all activists in our community were like Mansour. If he disagreed with you, he always remained your loyal friend, with class.

“I loved him and loved the way he operated: very supportive, genuine, sincere and he got things done.”

Activists and former newspaper publishers Abder and Amani Ghouleh also paid tribute.

“Mansour was a man who was always there for the Arab American community,” they said. “He consistently volunteered his time, funds and advice to help many causes.

“His compassion and love for others was there to the very end, as he checked on many of his friends during this difficult time in the world. It was our honor to serve with him on...many ad hoc activist committees, as well as being his colleagues in local community journalism.”

Former Cook County Illinois Judge William Haddad described Tadros as a “great community leader.”

“The Arab-American community has lost a great friend. Mansour was a leader, an activist, a journalist and a man who loved his heritage and defended it I knew him as a colleague who worked with us not for himself, but for our people.”
 


Saudi who swapped ejection seats for tech reviews — and topped KSA charts 

Updated 19 December 2025
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Saudi who swapped ejection seats for tech reviews — and topped KSA charts 

  • In an exclusive interview with Arab News, the host of ‘2You’ and ‘Up To Date KSA’ talks about digital wellness, AI’s future, and his plans to fill the gap in Arabic tech content 
  • Top Arab content creator in Saudi Arabia’s 2025 top 10 most-viewed YouTube channels describes milestone as ‘shockingly’ positive 

LONDON: Speaking to Faisal Al-Saif, a self-described tech lover, one of the least likely things you expect to hear is advice on disconnecting from technology. 

Yet the idea of a “tech diet” — more commonly known as digital wellbeing — takes on added weight when it comes from someone whose work revolves around gadgets and who relies on social media as their primary platform. 

Beyond this seemingly analytical, Web 1.0-style perspective, Al-Saif draws on more than two decades of experience as a tech expert — or, in today’s terms, a content creator. 

“I’m an early believer that technology is here to connect us more, to make the world even smaller than what it is, and make us just more active, more productive, and have more time for our religion, for our families and for our actual lives,” Al-Saif told Arab News. 

Al-Saif trained as an aircraft engineer at BAE Systems, where he specialized in ejection seats for Royal Saudi Air Force jets, before entering broadcasting in 2004, hosting and producing KSA2’s English-language “2You” and, later, the technology show “Up To Date KSA.” 

In 2009, he pivoted to YouTube — a platform with more limited reach and no monetization at the time — to help fill the gap in Arabic tech content. 

“Back then, if you searched about a device or a system or a piece of information, the main language you would find the result in was English. So, I just started creating a channel and putting some good content in (both) Arabic and in English,” he said. 

This approach required filming videos twice. Initially, videos in English drew more views, while Arabic lagged, but that shifted month by month as Arabic content gained traction. 

“To put it in perspective, back then, it wasn’t a source of income — not a main, not a minor, not a partial.” 

Today, Al-Saif’s channel delivers straightforward reviews that guide viewers on whether to buy or avoid products based on their needs, not brand pressure. 

“I love creating content that gives value to the people. I love simplifying information. I love tech in a crazy way,” he said. “I like to see new tech, test it, be an early adopter of it. Tell people, ‘This is good because of this, and (that) could have been better with those implemented.’ Tell people to buy or not to buy based on their preferences, not based on companies and what they want to push.” 

Creators typically earn through ad revenue, fan funding, product placement, and sponsorships, though Al-Saif distances himself from the “influencer” label. 

“Part of it is that struggle we went through throughout the years, of trying to create valuable business propositions for everybody who works with us, being very fair and honest about what I present, and trying to help companies, just to help companies. Not seeking business.” 

Earlier this month, almost two decades after starting his channel, Al-Saif was named top Arab content creator — and the only regional entry — in Saudi Arabia’s 2025 top 10 most-viewed YouTube channels, a milestone he described as “shocking” in a positive sense. 

“Being on that top 10 list gives me a cool push after 16 years,” he said of his UTD Saudi channel, which has 8.92 million subscribers. 

“(When) I go into a hospital, I find a lot of Saudis that know me. But also, I find some Filipino nurses coming to me (telling me), ‘I watch your videos.’ I like that kind of diversity (which) is only possible on YouTube and educational content.” 

Al-Saif views YouTube as a modern visual library to help informed decisions. While social media shifts toward short-form videos, he believes the platform is resisting this trend. 

“If it’s all short-term content, it’s us supporting that short attention span (which) is being developed with people.”  

He champions long-form reviews, beginning with a brief story, then details, to encourage informed decisions. By contrast, he argued, three-second or ultra-short videos may be excellent at grabbing attention, but are largely useless for serious decisions, “unless (perhaps) it’s a cooking video.” 

In 2012, after seeing an opening, Al-Saif left BAE Systems — “initially only for two years” — to launch Tech Pills Productions, helping companies such as Intel, Microsoft, and HP create content, a move that boosted his career. He later diversified into tech startups, though he shuns the “investor” label. 

“I don’t see myself as an entrepreneur or an investor. I just see myself as a tech lover,” he said. “I try to push myself into diversifying the business and creating other pillars. So, I went into other types of investments, working and developing applications with different partners, and all of that went well. That part made me more comfortable creating content for the joy of it instead for the business side of it.” 

In 2021, Al-Saif backed Karaz (Arabic for “cherries”), an EHR platform using IoT, AI, and real-time data for healthcare, originally a gamified app for diabetic children. “(I’m drawn to a project) if there’s a human touch,” he said. “It’s relating data to human change in a positive way that made me not hesitate and go for it.” 

While AI pitches flood in, past flops have left him with a degree of “marketing resistance.” 

“I find that AI does add value if you have those (proper) steps into getting into AGI (artificial general intelligence) and the later steps that will come. It’s the proper development. But the hype about relating everything to AI, that part, I’m definitely against,” he said. 

AI has dominated headlines for three years, fueling an economic boom, and sparking debate over job losses and ethical risks. Al-Saif acknowledges the technology’s “endless opportunities,” but doubts the hype will last and that AI will ultimately drive the world. “They will find something else; either it’s diverted from AI or from another field in technology to create that marketing sense.” 

Asked what people should be more aware of, he urged greater public education on AI’s dual nature. 

“It’s a knife that you can cook with, or it’s a knife that can stab someone. There’s a seriousness about AI, and sadly, the world does not do enough regarding the sense of awareness,” he said. 

Without greater understanding, unchecked AI could create generations shaped entirely by whatever information they are fed, regardless of truth, he said, adding that the technology already enables bad behavior excused as “AI-generated” and blurs fact and fiction, making regulations essential. 

Saudi Arabia is leading responsibly through its Data and AI Authority, he said. “I think they’re going very well within multiple sides: the regulatory part, the governance side, as well as when it comes to investing heavily with the infrastructure and AI companies.”  

Through the authority, the Kingdom has launched an ambitious plan to position itself at the forefront of AI technology. Al-Saif has contributed directly and indirectly, including advising on public strategies such as the Riyadh Charter on AI Ethics in the Islamic World. 

“It’s a very interesting place to be (at a) very interesting time. I’ve sat with the Crown Prince (Mohammed bin Salman). He talked about AI, his vision, and how AI will create this next wave of businesses and next wave of economy.” 

Asked whether our society is obsessed with technological progress, Al-Saif replies that “we are adopting (technologies) for what we need,” but adds that limits, such as Australia’s recent social media ban for youth, are needed. “But the thing is, they don’t ban stuff in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. They try to create a system.” 

At home, he supervises his children’s screen time or watches content together. “YouTube is still, I find, the safest platform (out) there because of its nature of long videos and vlogs. It is much more mature than any other platform when it comes to how to censor, how to control, how to do things.” 

However, he agreed that younger generations, as tech natives, perceive tech interaction differently, specifically when it comes to privacy. 

“Privacy is kind of a stretchy thing. I define privacy different than my kids when they grow up, and that made me think of privacy different. It’s not that we’re letting go of information. It’s the environment that we live in that creates that sense of privacy.” 

Al-Saif believes privacy has already been reshaped — not as a value we hold dear, but as an illusion where true personal boundaries have been eroded. What remains is a mere reflection of our actions online, not tied to our names, but reduced to anonymous data points or numbers in the digital ether. 

For Al-Saif, part of the answer lies in the power of disconnection, an approach that he has strongly advocated. 

“I give myself an hour or two a day maximum (online) to know about certain other stuff. My advice for anybody who wants to live 12 hours of cool life is: Try to experience or to learn something unrelated to tech.” 

Pointing to a beehive he keeps in the office, Al-Saif added: “There are other fields that I like to, let’s say, learn about. It’s a clear state of mind that you reach with it. And I just try to do as normal, natural things as possible; try to work with gadgets and appliances that don’t have batteries.”