ABC News Univision
Arturo Conde
Over the past month, pundits and immigration advocates have put forward
different reasons for why the United States is ready to embrace
immigration reform. They referred to political momentum stemming from
President Barack Obama's re-election, shifting demographics that give
greater influence to Latinos and other voters of color, and even the
$1.5 trillion that reform could add to the cumulative U.S. gross
domestic product over time. But perhaps the best reason is that
immigration has become a matter of basic civil rights for the 11 million
undocumented men, women, and children who work and live in the United
States today without any legal protection.
It is not surprising, then, that many black community leaders see
immigration reform as part of their own fight for civil rights. For
organizers like Reverend Al Sharpton, the fight for civil rights isn't
limited to the struggle of the black community, but extends to other
communities who endure similar types of discrimination.
"There are those that want to use the immigration laws, profile Latinos,
then they'll vote from there to profiling Africans, and
Trinidadians,and Haitians," Sharpton said at a 2012 rally commemorating
the 1965 march for black voter rights from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.
"We're telling you just like 47 years ago, when our fathers stood on
these steps and fought for our right to vote, and our right to be free
of racism, we stand with the community to tell you we will repeal these
immigration laws."
At a Congressional Black Caucus meeting
earlier in February, Representative Steven Horsford (D-Nev.) framed the
matter of immigrant rights in the context of the black community's
battle for equality. "As Dr. King said, an injustice anywhere is a
threat to justice everywhere. It is that creed of the civil rights
movement that still motivates us today," said Horsford. "So today, we
take up the cause of joining arms with our immigrant brothers and
sisters in that spirit… to lend a hand to those who confront injustice
as a result of a broken immigration system."
Organizations focused on black rights like the NAACP have even applied
their civil rights experience to defending immigrants. In 2010, the
organization challenged Arizona's immigration law on
the grounds that it "invites racial profiling against people of color
by law enforcement… and infringes on the free speech rights of day
laborers…"
Immigration activists like Ravi Ragbir, an organizer for the New Sanctuary Coalition of New York City,
which works with people who face deportation on a daily basis, also
frame immigration policy as a violation of basic civil liberties. "These
laws do not target you because of what you are doing, but who you are,
and because of that, it has become a civil rights issue," Ragbir
explained.
Immigration reform, like the Civil Rights Movement once did, aims to
humanize laws that are forcing people to live in the shadows of society,
and that, Ragbir said, goes beyond being merely a matter of public
policy. "If I choose to oppress you, there will be someone else who will
come to oppress me," he said. "Immigration reform should push forward
the perspective that to be undocumented is not a public-safety issue, a
threat to society, or a national-security issue."
Notably, some proposals aimed at restricting undocumented immigrants
from accessing employment and social benefits have brought civil rights
to the foreground when it turned out the laws would affect all
Americans. The REAL ID Act, for instance, which offers driver's licenses
to undocumented immigrants, also proposed new federal standards for
identification for all citizens. The provision sparked a national
debate. Advocates wanted stricter ID programs to fight terrorism and
limit immigration, but opponents saw a system that not only could
discriminate—depending on ID costs, proof of residence and other
criteria—but also intrude on the privacy and civil rights of everyone living in America.
While similar experiences in the face of discrimination have brought
blacks and undocumented Latinos together for immigration reform, some
immigration specialists point out that the African-American experience
is still very different from the Latino experience. "Whereas segregation
did not allow blacks to be full citizens, your experience as a Latino
immigrant will differ radically from immigrant to immigrant depending on
where you come from, depending on your social class and educational
background, and depending on your racial background too," said Claudio
Iván Remeseira, journalist and editor of Hispanic New York: A
Sourcebook.
The ability to find a universal plight in common, however, is what has
empowered different immigrant groups to team up with undocumented
Latinos in a shared cause. "Even though we are different and diverse,
and come from different cultural backgrounds, a lot of our issues are
common, whether it is fighting against detention or pushing for language
access, or making sure that we have a proper future for all of our
DREAMers," said Steven Choi, executive director of MinKwon Center for Community Action. The organization defends immigration rights for Koreans and the overall Asian community, which accounts for 1 million undocumented immigrants nationwide.
This solidarity, Choi added, empowers undocumented Asians to stand up
for themselves, and enlist in an open fight for a path to citizenship.
Whether one believes immigration reform is a civil rights issue, there's
still the argument that it's good policy. Many immigration specialists
point out that current immigration laws actually keep immigrants
undocumented longer, and as a result, increase the danger of creating an
underclass.
"Whatever one thinks of the situation that created today's large
undocumented population, one can easily see how much the presence of
such a large, permanent population who are part of our nation
economically, socially, and culturally, but not politically, ill serves a
democratic society," immigrant sociologists conclude in the book
Inheriting the City: The Children of Immigrants Coming of Age. "If we
are truly concerned about the integration of the children of immigrants
into American society, policies that keep their parents undocumented can
only be judged highly counterproductive."
It is this idea that democracy only works when everyone living in society participates that makes immigration reform both right and smart.
For More Information Contact us at:
http://www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com/index.html
About Me
- Eli Kantor
- Beverly Hills, California, United States
- Eli Kantor is a labor, employment and immigration law attorney. He has been practicing labor, employment and immigration law for more than 36 years. He has been featured in articles about labor, employment and immigration law in the L.A. Times, Business Week.com and Daily Variety. He is a regular columnist for the Daily Journal. Telephone (310)274-8216; eli@elikantorlaw.com. For more information, visit beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com and and beverlyhillsemploymentlaw.com
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