The Hill (Op-Ed)
By Jennifer Minear
December 14, 2015
Maybe
it is because they don’t know Ali, my Iraqi client who risked his life
to serve as a translator for our troops, who wrote me every few days
from Baghdad for weeks
and weeks, terrified for his family’s safety, not daring to leave their
apartment while he waited for their immigrant visa interview because he
knew he could be targeted at any time for having helped the Americans.
I don’t think I will ever forget the photo
he sent me once he’d finally arrived safely, beaming with his wife and
baby daughter inside a U.S. toy store.
Or,
it must be because they don’t know Raina, my Libyan client who is
petrified that her visa petition – already taking much longer than it
should due to the incompetency
and inefficiency of our cumbersome bureaucratic process - might somehow
be denied and that she, her husband and three young daughters might be
forced to return to Libya.
Or
my physician clients, Sam and Lena, he from Lebanon, she from Syria,
both skilled neurologists who have trained and lived for years in this
country and built a life
here with their two U.S. citizen children, but who call or email me
every week to ask me what more I can do about their green card
applications, which have been pending for over a year.
It
must be because not enough people know people like these. Notice I
said people - not “aliens,” not “terrorists,” not “Muslims,” not
“rapists,” not “illegals” - but
people. It must be that all of the sweeping generalizations and
stereotypes have made us forget that we are talking about human beings
here, not some homogeneous mass that can be scapegoated and painted as
the cause of all our problems. That must be why
the bigoted, hate-filled rhetoric of the likes of Donald Trump can
garner anything other than the 100% disgust, disdain and repudiation
that it deserves. That must be why legislation to block Syrian refugees
fleeing unspeakable danger can gain any support
at all in this country. That must be why we are so afraid that we are
even willing to consider rejecting the principles of fundamental
fairness, compassion and humanity that make this country great.
I
am so saddened to live in a time when ignorance and fear have propelled
a fascist fearmonger to the top of the presidential polls. But Donald
Trump’s latest plan to
prohibit any Muslim from entering the United States is more than just
sad; it is dangerous, it is vile and it is wrong. It is also
counter-productive to the goal of preventing terrorism. By targeting an
entire group of people based on their religious belief,
we would be creating exactly the kind of stark “us vs. them” conflict
that terrorism seeks to stoke and perpetuate, generating new levels of
hatred and misunderstanding by dividing Americans from other peoples of
the world at a time when we should be embracing
our common humanity and enlisting support of the millions of Muslims
around the world who condemn and denounce terrorism.
While
we must of course be vigilant and take every precaution to protect our
country against those who would do us violence, we must accomplish this
objective without
abandoning our common decency or our fundamental values as a nation. I
am frankly horrified at the number of Americans who have become so
blinded by fear that they do not see this.
This must end.
And
we must all do our part to stop it. We must tell the stories of our
clients, loudly and clearly and repeatedly, as often and in as many
different forums as we can.
We must educate the media and everyone else we know about the laws that
are in place to protect us, while simultaneously promoting the
principles of human rights, fundamental fairness and freedom of
opportunity that are the cornerstone of democracy. We must
call out hatred and bigotry wherever we see it and whatever the
source. We must stand up against fear-driven legislation that alienates
our allies and harms innocents while doing nothing to make us safer.
And we must never, ever forget that our greatest
strength is our diversity and our willingness to protect and promote
individual rights and liberties in a free and open society.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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