I have meet personally 100s of them in my circle or people who know these in my circle working in high positions and some of them middle class etc etc..
Most of them they live the arabic culture, they breathe it and they die in it hence there is no compromise.. They are very culturally strong and the ones who rarely exchange their culture in the west because they see their culture as superior hence they have no need to adapt to inferior culture
That's just not reality.
U.S Stats 2016:
"Post-1965 arrivals consisted of a wider mix of people seeking family unification, education and employment opportunities, and safety from war and persecution. MENA immigrants arriving during this time had similarly high education levels as those in the second wave, but were far more numerous. Further, a much higher share was Muslim. Between 1980 and 2010, the size of the MENA immigrant population increased four-fold, from 223,000 to 861,000 (see Figure 1). From 2010 to 2016, the population increased another 36 percent, to 1,167,000."
" Top destinations beyond the region include France (2.9 million), Turkey (1.6 million), the United States (911,000), Spain (779,000), and Italy (726,000), according to mid-2015 estimates from the United Nations Population Division "
"Overall, MENA immigrants have much higher educational attainment compared to the total foreign- and native-born adult populations. In 2016, 43 percent of MENA immigrants (ages 25 and over) had a bachelor’s degree or higher, compared to 30 percent of the total immigrant population and 32 percent of the native born. Almost all immigrant-origin groups from the MENA region were more likely to be college-educated than the overall foreign-born population, with the exception of Yemenis. The college graduate share was particularly high among immigrants from the United Arab Emirates (83 percent), Egypt (63 percent), Libya (60 percent), and Saudi Arabia and Kuwait (about 56 percent each), while just 16 percent of Yemenis had a bachelor’s degree or beyond.
Many students from the MENA region choose to study in the United States. In the 2016-17 school year, Saudi Arabia was the fourth top origin country among international students in the United States (after China, India, and South Korea), accounting for 5 percent (or 52,600) of the 1.1 million students during this period, according to the Institute of International Education (IIE). Kuwait was also on the list of the top 20 sending countries in 2016-17: About 9,900 Kuwaiti students studied in the United States that year"
US stats 2020:
"immigrants from the MENA region are far more likely to be highly educated than the total foreign- and native-born adult populations. In 2019, 46 percent of MENA immigrants ages 25 and older had a bachelor’s degree or higher, compared to 33 percent of all immigrant and U.S.-born adults. Among the MENA-origin population, the college-educated share ranges from 66 percent of Saudis to 43 percent of Lebanese and 33 percent of Iraqis. Just 14 percent of MENA immigrant adults lacked a high school diploma or equivalent, compared to 26 percent of all foreign-born and 8 percent of U.S.-born adults.
Many students from the MENA region choose to study in the United States. In the 2020-21 school year, 55,720 students from the region attended U.S. colleges and universities, according to the Institute of International Education (IIE). Saudi Arabia was the fifth top origin country among international students in the United States (after China, India, South Korea, and Canada), accounting for 3 percent (or 21,933) of the 914,095 international students during this period. Kuwait was also on the list of the top 20 sending countries: 6,846 Kuwaiti students studied in the United States that year.
Global remittances to the MENA region increased by about 48 percent between 2010 and 2020, reaching $55.9 billion as of 2020, according to World Bank estimates. Among MENA countries, Egypt received the most remittances at $29.6 billion in 2020, followed by Morocco at $7.4 billion and Lebanon at $6.3 billion. Remittances represented a different share of each individual country’s GDP, ranging from under 1 percent for Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar to 9 percent for Jordan, and 33 percent for Lebanon."