The Trump administration’s
Sept. 5 announcement rescinding the U.S. government’s Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy, which provided protections for
illegal immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children, resulted in
protests across the country last week, including one on the steps of
the State Capitol on Sunday, Sept. 10.
As
several speakers took turns at the microphone – including one area
student who stands to be affected by the decision – a common theme
emerged of Springfield’s long history of welcoming immigrant labor. The
Trump administration says the recision will not be for six months in
order for Congress to find an alternative.
Sister
Marcelline Koch, of Springfield’s Dominican Sisters, read a statement
which in part pointed out that in 1873, when the sisters first came to
Jacksonville, it was to teach immigrant children of Irish railroad
workers. Sister Elyse Ramirez, also of the Dominican Sisters, made
things more personal, speaking about her grandfather who was
undocumented until serving in the U.S. army during World War I, after
which he was granted citizenship. She also spoke of railroad workers
from all backgrounds living in Springfield, who “spoke each other’s
language, wet-nursed each other’s babies…that’s what our country is, not what we want it to be.”
“The
misunderstanding is always the same when it comes to immigrants and
even refugees,” said UIS instructor Veronica Espina, who also chairs the
Springfield Welcoming City committee.
“The contexts and circumstances in which those parents were forced to
leave were not easy ones.” Espina spoke in detail about Springfield
history, beginning with an 1850 wave of Portuguese immigrants who
settled here to escape religious harassment at home, to the Irish
immigrants that worked on the railroad, to the end of the 19 th century
when English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh and German miners settled in
Springfield to work in the coal mines. By 1899, she said, 25 percent of
the workers in Springfield mines hailed from France, Belgium, Austria,
Hungary, Russia and Italy – with Italians making up the largest single
group of miners. “We are and always have been a city of immigrants,” she
said.
Rev. Martin
Woulfe of the Abraham Lincoln Unitarian Universalist Congregation spoke
of his European immigrant ancestors. “My great-grandparents fled
Europe…and were driven to these shores,” he said. “By the language of
today, they were undocumented – the only paper they had was a ticket on a
steerage steamer – they did not have visas or government clearance.
Today, we can either reach out and welcome these people as brothers and
sisters or we can shove them away.”
Representing
the “Dreamers” (so-called because of the Dream Act, a piece of
bipartisan legislation introduced in 2001 by Sen. Dick Durbin,
D-Illinois, and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, which would provide permanent
protection for undocumented immigrants brought into the country as
children was 19-year-old Lisset, [last name withheld, out of fear for
the safety of
herself and her family], an Illinois College student who was brought to
the U.S. at age three. “When President Obama signed the executive order
for DACA,” she said, “things got a little brighter for a lot of us. It
gave me an identity.” Lisset said after DACA she was able to purchase a
vehicle, obtain a driver’s license and get a job.
Lisset
described a youth spent volunteering in nursing homes and planning
blood drives in Beardstown. She was president of her high school’s
National Honor Society, art club vice president and student council
treasurer –“all while maintaining a 4.0 GPA and working as a waitress at
a Mexican restaurant.” She is currently finishing her bachelor’s degree
at Illinois College, and hopes to attend medical school. “I pay taxes, I
contribute to the economy and to my community – my only crime has been
to want a future for myself and for America.” She pointed out that DACA
only provides a Social Security number and work permit to eligible
recipients, who cannot receive food stamps, medical insurance or
benefits and who must pay taxes and cannot have any sort of criminal
record.
“I am in no
way a politician, but I do believe that President Trump approached this
in a cruel way,” Lisset said. “I have a message for President Trump,
Congress and for all of those who see us as criminals – I am American.
All 800,000 of us are Americans. We will not leave, we will stay and
fight with every ounce of energy in us.”
Contact Scott Faingold at [email protected].