immigration
Posted December 27th, 2011 by Lisa Moore
“I think that no one should live in fear of being deported and separated from their families. I believe that the way we are in our families, taking care of each other, is how we should live in the world. My family is partly immigrants, but we have the privilege of having citizenship. I want [...]
Posted November 22nd, 2011 by Emily Butera
Emily Butera is the Senior Program Officer for Detention and Asylum at the Women’s Refugee Commission Maribel was driving in Virginia with her one-year-old child when she was pulled over by a police officer, who asked to see her driver’s license. A Mexican citizen living in the U.S. without a visa, Maribel was arrested for [...]
Posted November 14th, 2011 by Monica Trevino
The day Arizona Governor Brewer signed SB 1070 was the day that I decided to leave “traditional” journalism to pursue a career as an independent journalist reporting on issues that impact the Latino community. My hopes are to tell stories that accurately portray the community and bring a balanced and fair dialogue to the negative [...]
Posted November 9th, 2011 by Chris Harley
Do you have a wish for this holiday season? I do. I wish that all families can stay together. That’s why I’m participating in A Wish for the Holidays, a campaign to gather 5,000 letters from kids asking our nation’s leaders to ensure that families stay together. For me, holidays all boil down to spending [...]
Posted October 17th, 2011 by Lily Eskelsen
I do not understand deliberate cruelty. I understand it exists. I understand that those who practice it can often justify it as excusable and even noble. But cruelty to a child? This is beyond all understanding.
Posted October 14th, 2011 by Jill Garvey
The strength of motherhood has struck me whenever I’ve encountered the stories of young people being threatened with deportation to countries they no longer know – their mothers and the mothers in their communities are among the most powerful advocates in keeping families together. Several years ago I worked at a public elementary school assisting [...]
Posted October 4th, 2011 by Emily Butera
Fifty years ago, Alabama found itself at the center of a national battle for justice and civil rights. The bus boycotts, freedom rides and efforts to integrate schools and universities are widely looked upon as watershed moments in the march towards equality. The history books tell us that progress on this front has been significant [...]
Posted September 27th, 2011 by Katrina Anderson
As part of the We Belong Together delegation, I am going to Georgia to try to channel Eleanor Roosevelt. This is a tall order, but if there is ever a moment when her wisdom, passion and commitment was needed, this is it. A pioneer for human rights in her time, Eleanor was a principal drafter [...]
Posted September 27th, 2011 by Christiana Cummings
As an immigrant, a woman, a social worker and a professor who teaches about the immigrant experience in the United States, I feel very connected to other immigrants throughout this country on many levels. Restrictive immigration policies such as HB 87 in Georgia, HB 497 in Utah, SB1070 in Arizona and HB56 that is about [...]
Posted September 27th, 2011 by Margaret Huang
“This is not what I was taught the American Dream was. The American Dream in my eyes is everyone having equal rights…. I just want to let America know that this is not fair, what they’re doing to us is not fair, because my dad was stopped for no reason. I don’t think that wearing [...]
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