Associated Press
By Russel Contreras
August 30, 2015
Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump's call for mass deportation of
millions of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally, as well as their
American-born children,
bears similarities to a large-scale removal that many Mexican-American
families faced 85 years ago.
During
the Great Depression, counties and cities in the American Southwest and
Midwest forced Mexican immigrants and their families to leave the U.S.
over concerns they
were taking jobs away from whites despite their legal right to stay.
The
result: Around 500,000 to 1 million Mexican immigrants and Mexican
Americans were pushed out of the country during the 1930s repatriation,
as the removal is sometimes
called.
During
that time, immigrants were rounded up and sent to Mexico, sometimes in
public places and often without formal proceedings. Others, scared under
the threat of violence,
left voluntarily.
About
60 percent of those who left were American citizens, according to
various studies on the 1930s repatriation. Later testimonies show
families lost most of their possessions
and some family members died trying to return. Neighborhoods in cities
such as Houston, San Antonio and Los Angeles became empty.
The impact of the experience on Latinos remains evident today, experts and advocates say.
"It
set the tone for later deportations," said Francisco Balderrama, a
Chicano studies professor at California State University, Los Angeles.
Two
weeks ago, Trump said that, if elected president, he would expand
deportations and end "birthright citizenship" for children born to
immigrants who are here illegally.
Under his plan, American-born children of immigrants also would be
deported with their parents, and Mexico would be asked to help build a
wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
"They're
illegal," Trump said of U.S.-born children of people living in the
country illegally. "You either have a country or not."
Amid
his comments on immigration, polls show negative impressions of Trump
among Latinos. A Gallup poll released Aug. 24 found that Hispanics were
more likely to give
Trump unfavorable ratings than favorable ones by 51 percentage points.
Some
immigrant advocates pointed to the removal of prominent Latino
journalist Jorge Ramos from an Iowa press conference last week as a
metaphor for the candidate's desire
to remove Latinos from the United States.
"Mr.
Trump should heed the following warning: Our Latino and immigrant
communities are not going to forget the way he has treated them," the
Washington, D.C.-based Fair
Immigration Reform Movement said in a statement.
Ramos,
an anchor for Univision, was escorted out by a Trump aide after Ramos,
who had criticized Trump previously, tried to question Trump about his
immigration plan.
Trump interrupted Ramos, saying he hadn't been called on, and
ultimately told Ramos, "Go back to Univision."
Ramos was saying, "You cannot deport 11 million people," as he was escorted away. He was later allowed to return.
Trump
has provided few details on how his proposed deportation effort would
be carried out. The conservative-leaning American Action Forum concluded
in a report it would
cost between $400 billion to $600 billion and take 20 years to remove
an estimated 11.2 million immigrants living in the country illegally.
The
large-scale deportation he envisions would be impractical to enact, due
to the extent to which Mexican immigrants have integrated into U.S.
society, said Columbia
University history professor Mae Ngai.
U.S.-born
children of immigrants have been automatically considered American
citizens since the adoption of the Constitution's 14th Amendment in
1868. A Supreme Court
ruling in 1898 halted previous attempts to limit the birthright of
Chinese-American citizens after the passage of the Chinese Exclusion
Act.
The
ruling upheld the clause for all U.S.-born children, Ngai said, and
there have been no successful challenges to the clause since.
In
the 1930s, Balderrama said, officials skirted the issue of birthright citizenship by saying they did not want to break up families.
"But
they did break up families and many children never saw their parents
again," said Balderrama, co-author of a book about Mexican repatriation
in the 1930s with the
late historian Raymond Rodriguez, who testified before a California
state committee about seeing his father for the last time at age 10,
before the father left for Mexico.
That
legacy lingers in songs, often played on Spanish-language radio
stations, that allude to mass deportations and separation of loved ones,
said Lilia Soto, an American
studies professor at the University of Wyoming.
For
example, the lyrics to "Ice El Hielo," by the Los Angeles-band La Santa
Cecilia, speak of a community afraid that federal agents about to
arrive and launch deportations
raids at any moment. The ballad "Volver, Volver," sung by Mexican
ranchera performer Vicente "Chente" Fernandez, speaks of someone vowing
to return to a lover despite all obstacles.
"They're about families being apart," Soto said. "The lyrics are all indirectly linked to this past."
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