After
Nationwide ICE Raids, 50,000 People in Milwaukee Rose up to Say the Arrests
Were Wrong
Oliver Ortega
Tuesday, February 14, 2017
The Progressive
As
seventeen-year-old Daniel Gutierrez Ayala marched in Milwaukee on Monday, he
thought about the fate of his undocumented parents in Trump’s America. He
thought about his own tenuous future as a recipient of President Obama’s
deferred action program, and his dream of one day becoming a lawyer who fights
for the immigrant community.
As he
walked, the high school senior took comfort in the fact that he was not alone.
Tens of thousands walked with him—day laborers and business owners who closed
shop for the day, schoolchildren and working parents who had taken the morning
off, teachers and office workers, activists of all colors and creeds, all eager
to partake in one of the largest single manifestations for immigrant rights
since President Donald Trump took office.
“We have to
remember to stay strong, not fear,” Gutierrez Ayala said. “And what else can we
do? Just sit there? We’re not going to take it. We’re going to organize as best
as we can as a family and a community.”
In the wake
of nationwide raids [1] last
week that swept up more than 680 undocumented immigrants, activists have packed
the streets across the country in a show of resistance to the anti-immigrant
policies of President Donald Trump and local officials supporting him,
including Milwaukee County’s Sheriff David Clarke, who has vowed [2] to
empower his deputies to act as immigration agents in accordance with the President’s
executive orders on interior immigration enforcement.
ICE
officials say last week's raids were routine, but Trump has gone out of his way
to take credit [3]for the
vigorous crackdown, and immigrant rights groups tell The Progressive they’re
alarmed at what they say is a much broader dragnet than under Obama.
What’s
clear is that while the previous administration generally targeted people with
criminal records, Trump’s dragnet is sweeping up people like Guadalupe García
de Rayos, thirty-five, a mother of two in Arizona whose only crime was working
with a Social Security number that was not hers and whose case [4] has
galvanized activists. Up to eight million undocumented immigrants fall under
the new parameters for deportation, according to an analysis [5] by
the LA Times.
“They would
like us to disarm ourselves by pretending this is normal,” said Christine
Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of Voces de La Frontera, which organized the
march, called “Dia sin Latinos, Inmigrantes, y Refugiados” or “ Day Without
Latinos, Immigrants and Refugees” in English. “The fact is that they are
stepping up their presence.”
Across the
country, immigrant advocates like Neumann-Ortiz are also continuing the vital
work of building sanctuary networks, lobbying elections officials at all
levels, and running workshops to inform people about their rights when
confronted by immigration agents. They’re ramping up resistance efforts as Trump
continues his attack on the immigrant community, including with his now legally
invalidated seven-country Muslim ban.
Electoral
politics have failed to address issues pressing to immigrants, Neumann-Ortiz
said, so she and others organized decided a strike would be more effective,
modeling Monday’s action along those that took place in the spring of 2006,
when millions of immigrants and allies took to the street in a series of
demonstrations to defeat a draconian immigration bill being considered in Congress
at the time. Already, Neumann-Ortiz and others are hoping to take the
anti-Trump momentum and build up a May Day general strike this year.
“When there
isn't any recourse at the political level, it has been through the general
strike that we’ve been able to have our power felt,” she said. The group held
its first “Dia Sin Latinos” march in Wisconsin last year, but this year’s
attendance was nearly triple at around 50,000, organizers say.
In West
Chicago, Illinois, the pastor Jose S. Landaverde scanned the packed pews Sunday
at the Faith, Life, and Hope and St. Peter the Apostle Mission, delivering a
homily about immigration that resonated with the heavily Mexican and
Mexican-American audience.
Since news
reports came out of raids across the country, including in major cities that
have declared themselves sanctuaries, congregants had been coming to him for
counsel, many terrified. During mass, he spoke about the need to respect God’s
law while transforming man’s unjust laws, alluding to Trump’s executive orders
and the millions of deportations that took place under Obama,
He exhorted
his congregants to stand strong, to provide help to neighbors in these trying
times. Landaverde, himself a refugee from El Salvador, pledged his church would
continue to be a sanctuary church. Since October, his church has hosted one
immigrant targeted by ICE, and the parish is prepared to take more if
necessary, he says.
“What we’re
concerned with right now is providing a comprehensive response to stop these
deportations,” Landaverde told The Progressive in
Spanish.
At the Los
Angeles Filipino United Church of Christ, the Reverend Doctor Art Cribbs had
similar message for worried parishioners, assuring them the church would be
there for them.
Cribbs and
others told The Progressive that since the Muslim ban, more activists from
Muslim and Jewish congregations have joined the heavily Latino immigrant
movement. Cribbs is part of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity, which
has worked to expand the network of sanctuary churches and places of worship in
California.
Since
Trump’s election, the number of churches in the Bay, Inland Valley, and
Claremont areas have risen from four to fifteen, said Interfaith immigration
director Deborah Lee. Nationally, there are more than 800 congregations [6] that
have become sanctuaries since November 8, up from about 350. And Lee is in
consultation with many others in California to join the burgeoning network.
Yet there
is much uncertainty for the movement. Lee said she wonders whether ICE under
the Trump administration will honor a longstanding policy of not entering
churches. There’s also an ambiguously worded part of the interior enforcement
executive order that may mean sanctuary churches can face penalties for helping
the undocumented, she says.
Church
sanctuaries are just one front. Groups such as the Illinois Coalition for
Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR) have been expanding efforts to educate
people about their rights when confronted with immigration agents, as well as
upping efforts to make legal residents citizens in order to minimize their risk
of removal.
Twice a
week, Luis Huerta-Silva does Know Your Rights workshops in the Chicago area as
part of ICIRR’s outreach efforts. Demand has grown tremendously since the
election; recently, he more than 100 people to attend an event at a local
college.
During
these workshops, he counsels people not to open the door to ICE without first
seeing a warrant, and to contact a lawyer before signing any papers or
answering questions. Many of the arrests last week, he and others told The
Progressive, were “collateral arrests,” meaning those detained weren’t the
original targets but got swept up in the raid once agents confirmed they were
in the country without documents. Most were house raids, but there were also
reports of workplaces being targeted.
The tactics
are not new, but Trump’s rhetoric and recent executive orders could embolden
agents to expand unfair practices, he told The
Progressive.
There is
now an expanding network of affordable lawyers ready to help, said Mayra Joachin,
a staff attorney for the National Immigration Law Center. Like ICIRR, the
LA-based law center holds workshops on rights and citizenship, in addition to
providing legal services. With the uncertainty around how the Trump
administration will implement its policy, it's more important than ever that
immigrants become more knowledgeable about the legal process that might await
them.
Not long
ago, Gutierrez Ayala’s undocumented parents were stopped by police as they
drove without a license. If Trump and Sheriff Clarke have their way, the next
time that happens his parents could be detained and, later, deported. He
himself will be at risk if Trump does away with DACA. That’s why Gutierrez
Ayala will continue to march and organize.
“There’s
fear, but there’s resistance.” he said. “We’re not going to give up without a
fight.”
Links:
[1] http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-immigration-raids-idUSKBN15S2AQ
[2] https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/bddb3a2d-0747-3643-a7f0-dcb294756a69/ss_sheriff-david-clarke-commits.html
[3] http://www.wtae.com/article/donald-trump-praises-ice-for-immigration-enforcement-crackdown/8734031
[4] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/08/us/phoenix-guadalupe-garcia-de-rayos.html?_r=0
[5] http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-deportations-20170204-story.html
[6] http://www.sanctuarynotdeportation.org/blog/sanctuaryrising
[7] https://www.pubservice.com/submiscrcpt.aspx?PC=TP&FD=SM
[8] https://www.pubservice.com/submiscrcpt.aspx?PC=TP&FD=OT
[2] https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/bddb3a2d-0747-3643-a7f0-dcb294756a69/ss_sheriff-david-clarke-commits.html
[3] http://www.wtae.com/article/donald-trump-praises-ice-for-immigration-enforcement-crackdown/8734031
[4] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/08/us/phoenix-guadalupe-garcia-de-rayos.html?_r=0
[5] http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-deportations-20170204-story.html
[6] http://www.sanctuarynotdeportation.org/blog/sanctuaryrising
[7] https://www.pubservice.com/submiscrcpt.aspx?PC=TP&FD=SM
[8] https://www.pubservice.com/submiscrcpt.aspx?PC=TP&FD=OT
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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