As
Jews, being the stranger, "ger," is
central to our identity. We were
told recently in Mishpatim: "And you
shall not mistreat a stranger, nor
shall you oppress him, for you were
strangers in the land of Egypt.”
Thirty-five more times in the Torah
we are reminded to welcome the
stranger.
Whether
we are newcomers or our families have
been here for generations, we must act
with the memory of the stranger when we
think about how we relate to immigrants
today.
My
family arrived on American soil in the
1910s from Romania and Ukraine. They
left a life of pogroms, poverty and
oppression that thankfully I can only
imagine from books and stories. They
were lucky to leave, and lucky they came
when U.S. laws were open to Eastern
Europeans. Ten years later, once
restrictive quota laws were passed,
their story would have been different.
Over
the years, immigration policies often
have favored political and economic
needs over human needs. Our immigration
system today is broken and raids have
come to substitute for reform.
Since
its creation in 2003, Immigration and
Customs Enforcement has detained
thousands of people in immigration
raids. ICE claims raids protect public
safety and national security. However,
the vast majority of those affected are
not criminals and do not threaten
anyone’s safety.
Raids
separate families, violate due process,
hurt the economy, waste taxpayer money,
misuse local police and threaten basic
human rights of U.S. citizens and
non-citizens. The damage continues well
after the operation is over, and towns
are left to deal with the resulting
crisis.
Consider these facts:
* In
2008, 5,100 people were taken into
custody in workplace raids, compared to
685 in 2004. Due-process violations
during raids included entering without a
warrant, interrogation without
reasonable suspicion and racial
profiling.
* ICE's
2008 budget was $5 billion — $4 billion
more than the State Department. Not
passing immigration reform equals a
bigger budget and a bigger problem. The
Agriprocessors raid in Iowa alone cost
$5.2 million.
* From
January 2004 to November 2007, 67 people
died in detention; no government body is
required to track or report deaths.
*
Children of detained and deported
immigrants are sometimes put in foster
care.
* In
places such as Laurel, Miss., and
Postville, Iowa, sites of the largest
ICE raids in U.S. history, the loss of
taxpayers, tenants and workers has
caused property values to plummet and
general economic crisis.
Our
relatives came here seeking to improve
their lives and their children’s lives,
often escaping dire conditions. Though
many came here legally, many came
without documents because they had no
other options. Quotas were full, home
countries were unsafe, starvation loomed
— it was a matter of survival.
Some
Jews arriving at Ellis Island underwent
unethical medical exams and many were
slated for deportation. Due to language
barriers and legalities, they were
rarely able to defend themselves. They
also faced impossible working conditions
and exploitative employers. Today’s
immigrants are facing hardships
remarkably similar to our ancestors’.
Too
frequently they are met with hostile
policies, racially motivated agendas and
an unwelcoming atmosphere. This is
simply wrong — we remember from our own
history where this mentality and actions
based on it can lead.
As Jews
we are commanded not to enslave, wrong
or oppress strangers.
Jewish
Community Action of St. Paul, along with
20 national Jewish organizations, is
spearheading Progress by Pesach: the
Jewish Call for Immigration Reform, not
Raids. The program emphasizes family
reunification, pathways to citizenship,
legalized future migration, human rights
protections, and the importance of
ensuring due process and protections for
workers and employers.
By
Passover, which coincides with the Obama
administration’s first 100 days, we hope
to see serious steps in Washington
toward passing just and humane
immigration reform. Progress by Pesach
echoes the call being made by millions
of immigrant supporters.
There
is no better time to act — to make your
voice known in Washington — than at
Passover. By signing a
petition or letter, you will join
thousands of others in making the
administration and Congress understand
that we as Jews remember, we as Jews are
commanded to act on the behalf of
others, and we as Jews say "dayenu,"
enough, to inadequate and unjust laws
governing those who yearn to no longer
be strangers.
Lauren
Bastien is a community organizer with
Jewish Community Action in St. Paul,
Minn., which is spearheading Progress by
Pesach along with the Jewish Council on
Urban Affairs and the Hebrew Immigrant
Aid Society.