What we’re reading

A few picks from AFSC staff this week:

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“Palestine: Hungry for freedom,” by Ben White, Newsweek

Palestinian journalist Mohammad Al Qeeq recently ended his 94-day hunger strike protesting his indefinite detention without charge in an Israeli prison. According to Newsweek, “Al Qeeq’s detention is symptomatic of a wider undermining of press freedom by the Israeli authorities. Although the recent brief detention of two journalists working for The Washington Post by Israeli border police officers made headlines, Palestinian media workers are routinely harassed, detained, or subjected to violence, at the hands of Israeli forces.”

AFSC has worked for peace and justice in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territoryfor many years, and is currently challenging Israeli military detention as part of theNo Way to Treat a Child campaign.

“Meet the badass moms leading the fight for clean water and justice in Flint,” by Katie McDonough, Fusion

It’s no coincidence that the contaminated water supply in Flint, Michigan has become a national news story. Community members and activists on the ground—and mothers in particular—have been working tirelessly for access to clean drinking water and environmental and economic justice for their city. Katie McDonough writes, “When it came to the struggle in Flint, Desiree told me something I heard a lot that day: ‘The water was just a symptom of something bigger that has been happening for a long time.’ The water needed to be clean, yes, but the jobs in the city also needed to pay fair wages, the schools needed to offer kids a good education, the health care needed to be accessible and affordable.”

“In absence of federal immigration reform, states are taking action by Esther Yu-Hsi Lee,” Think Progress

As Congress has failed to act on comprehensive immigration reform, and President Obama’s executive actions on immigration are awaiting a ruling by the Supreme Court, states across the country are creating their own immigration-related policies. According to Esther Yu-Hsi Lee, “Some of those policies include requiring local law enforcement officials to enforce federal immigration law; requiring employers to verify work eligibility; and either reducing or expanding driver’s licenses, in-state tuition, and prenatal care and child health insurance to undocumented immigrants. Only 11 states had not adopted one or more policies that researchers looked into.”

Check out our immigrant rights page for more on AFSC’s efforts for just and humane immigration policies.

Standing up to xenophobia on the campaign trail

(originally published here)

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At an event for a presidential candidate last summer, I had the opportunity to talk with Iowa U.S. Rep. Steve King. Even if you’re not an Iowan like me, you may have heard some of the comments he’s made about undocumented immigrants—comparing them to dogs, calling one person “a deportable,” and insisting that many were drug smugglers with “calves the size of cantaloupes.”

When I met Rep. King, I told him about my family here in Des Moines. I told him we had emigrated from Mexico when I was 2 years old for a better life. And that my parents had worked hard to support us while contributing to the community.

None of that seemed to faze him. We were here “illegally,” as far as Rep. King was concerned, and had no right to be in the United States, even though, as a child, I had had no choice in the matter.

I’ve had several encounters like these during my time as grassroots engagement coordinator with AFSC’s Governing Under the Influence project. In the year leading up to the earliest presidential primary contests, I worked with young people, particularly Latinos and other people of color, and encouraged them to question candidates about excessive corporate influence on public policy, including immigration.

When I started, I knew I would meet those who didn’t see eye to eye with me. But I wasn’t prepared for the xenophobia and fear that candidates would stir up through rhetoric aimed at immigrants like me.

People ask me how I keep my composure in such hostile situations. Why I don’t get upset or cause a scene that would draw more public attention to such hateful speech.

In these situations, I stay calm. I remind myself how important it is to engage with all people, including those who strongly disagree with me. I remind myself of the power of education to change hearts and minds. And I remind myself that I can’t begin to educate people if I walk away. Or act in a manner that makes them push me away.

These people aren’t my enemies. They’re people who, through their own life experiences, have developed stereotypes and misconceptions that haven’t been corrected. I think about what might have happened in this person’s life that made them afraid of people like me. I recognize that they’re probably generations removed from the immigrant process, that they don’t understand the difficulties we face just living our lives.

I think of these things because I want to understand where people are coming from. If I don’t, I’m guilty of dehumanizing them as much as they’ve dehumanized me.
Sharing my personal narrative is the most powerful tool I have against statements like, “You shouldn’t be here.” My mother came to the U.S. with a law degree not knowing she’d have to work as a housekeeper. Being undocumented meant I couldn’t get a driver’s license, vote in elections, or qualify for financial aid for school. But I graduated from college, with honors, and am now making a life for myself the way my parents hoped I would.

Even those who yell at me at rallies or town hall meetings can relate to my story. I know some people will never change their minds, but I also see signs that some people can. And I’m putting in the work—and withstanding some difficult situations—to move us all toward a place where we respect the humanity and dignity of all people.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hector Salamanca Arroyo

Hector Salamanca Arroyo served as grassroots engagement coordinator with AFSC’s Governing Under the Influence project in Iowa. Originally from Puebla, Mexico, Hector has lived in Iowa for the past 20 years and is a graduate of Drake University, where he created a campus organization to improve access to higher education for undocumented immigrants. Hector has also interned for Organizing for America and AFSC’s Immigrant Voice Program.

Next week some AFSC staff–together with several other partner organizations–will be fasting for three days in front of the ICE Headquarters.
More details and solidarity info at afsc.org/FastWithUs.

Next week some AFSC staff–together with several other partner organizations–will be fasting for three days in front of the ICE Headquarters.

More details and solidarity info at afsc.org/FastWithUs

They are called detention centers, but let’s be clear: they are prisons. 

(Source: youtube.com)

Who profits from U.S.-Mexico border militarization? And who pays?
Companies who profit from border militarization spent $74,000 per day on lobbying activities during key legislation times. More at bit.ly/BorderProfit

Who profits from U.S.-Mexico border militarization? And who pays?

Companies who profit from border militarization spent $74,000 per day on lobbying activities during key legislation times. More at bit.ly/BorderProfit 

Take a minute to ask Congress to continue to keep protections for immigrant children with just a few clicks at bit.ly/KeepProtect
President Obama has proposed speedy deportation, stripping children of the right to asylum proceedings, as the most...

Take a minute to ask Congress to continue to keep protections for immigrant children with just a few clicks at bit.ly/KeepProtect

President Obama has proposed speedy deportation, stripping children of the right to asylum proceedings, as the most humane solution for immigrant who are minors. We need Congress to step in and say that it is wrong to strip the civil and human rights of anyone, but particularly children, in the face of crisis.