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Journalist Sonia Nazario brought the topic of immigration to the campus conversation during a September 16 visit to 极乐禁地.
Dialogue was based on her award-winning book, Enrique鈥檚 Journey, in which Nazario highlights the plight of children who risk life and limb to travel alone in pursuit of their mothers who had left home in search of a better life in the U.S. The book grew out of a Pulitzer-Prize winning feature story Nazario wrote in 2003.
鈥淢y hope was to humanize the immigrant. Sometimes it is easier to demonize them than to understand them,鈥 Nazario said of her decision to chronicle the journey of one teen who traveled atop freight trains from Honduras to the U.S. in search of his mother.
Nazario鈥檚 lecture was part of the Cordell Hull Speakers Forum sponsored by 极乐禁地鈥檚 Cumberland School of Law. Prior to her talk, the Forum teamed with Alabama Appleseed advocacy organization to sponsor a panel discussion on immigration.
When Nazario first met Enrique in Mexico near the Laredo, Texas, border, she learned that his mother had left their home when he was age five. Eleven years later, with few belongings besides his mother鈥檚 U.S. phone number, Enrique became one of thousands of children who make similar journeys each year.
鈥淚t is an incredible journey. Many don鈥檛 make it,鈥 said Nazario, telling how bandits and gangsters climb atop the trains, rob, and often rape the young travelers. In Mexico, policies agencies may deport Central American children back to their home country.听 The children often lose arms and legs from falling off the train and other accidents. 鈥淚f the bandits and cops don鈥檛 get you, the train might,鈥 she said.
Nazario, who has written about social issues for听 several decades, most recently for The Los Angeles Times, recreated Enrique鈥檚 experience by taking the three-month journey twice, but with a major difference. When the train would stop, she would go to a hotel for a clean bed and hot meal, something that Enrique went months without. 鈥淥nce, he went two days without water,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 could not fathom what these kids would do to reach the U.S.,鈥 said Nazario. But for Enrique, 鈥渘othing would keep him from reaching his mom.鈥
Enrique鈥檚 mother, Nazario said, is typical of many female immigrants who intend to stay in the U.S. for a year or two, make some money, and return home to their families.听 Once they find the situation not as bright as promised, many must extend their stay to five or even 10 years.
The mothers send money back home, but after years apart, the children feel abandoned by their moms. 鈥淚n the end, the mom鈥檚 lose what鈥檚 most important to them: the love of their children,鈥 said Nazario, who first learned of the practice when a worker in her Los Angeles home tearfully shared that she had left four children behind in Guatemala.
The kitchen conversation, she said, opened her eyes to the fact that more than half of the 11 million people who are in the U.S. without permission are women and children.
鈥淚鈥檝e written about migrants for 20 years, but didn鈥檛 realize the incredible desperation that鈥檚 driving these people north,鈥 she said, citing a 42 percent unemployment rate in Honduras.
Most immigrants would rather stay in their home countries, she said. 鈥淭he women say that if they could feed, dress and educate their kids, they would not cause them to risk their lives on trains to follow them.鈥
In the U.S., they typically do hard work for minimum wage, often taking tasks that Americans will not do.
Studies show, said Nazario, that immigrants add to the economy and make some goods and services cheaper. Also because immigrants may work cheaper, some businesses haven鈥檛 had to close in the current economy, she noted.听 There are winners and losers, such as the many Americans who don鈥檛 have jobs in such fields as construction and roofing, which may hire undocumented workers.听 A reality, she said, is that many immigrants are poor and pay less taxes, but use government services such as education.
The whole topic of immigration is complex, agreed speakers at the panel discussion.
Immigration law is 鈥渃omplicated and convoluted,鈥 and the immigration system is broken, said panelist Klari Tedrow, a Birmingham immigration attorney and adjunct professor at Cumberland. 鈥淲e need reform from top to bottom,鈥 she said, noting that there are waiting lines as long as 10 years for immigrants to come to the U.S. legally.
Panel members also included victim witness specialist Jacqueline Vickers of the U.S Attorney鈥檚 office, Leslie Hillhouse of Catholic Social Services鈥 multicultural resource center, and Shay Farley, legal director of Alabama Appleseed.
Moderator Zayne Smith, immigration policy fellow with Alabama Appleseed, encouraged the audience of law and undergraduate students to educate themselves about immigration issues and get involved when possible.
鈥淓verybody needs to be sensitive to others鈥 rights. Just because a person speaks with an accent or has dark skin doesn鈥檛 mean they鈥檙e illegal or criminals,鈥 said Smith.
Tedrow noted the U.S. is not the only country with immigration issues. 鈥淭here is no country we can look to as a good example,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s long as we have separate nations with borders, there will be problems.鈥
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