My (Sal) parents immigrated here to the US in the early 70's for a "better life". It was during an "open door" where may from the Philippines were able to immigrate to the US. I remembered the "hardships" or "challenges" they faced "coming to America"-like many others before, during, and after them. I'm just thankful that God provided for them and the opportunity to come to this "great" country as He definitely had a plan for each of us in our family.
"National and local immigration issues were discussed in two Learning Unlimited forums in Morris.
Immigration discussed
At the Nov. 8 National Issues Forum, University of Minnesota, Morris historian Stephen Gross and UMM economist Solomon Gashaw dealt with the historical and economic aspects of immigration, including Gashaw's personal story of immigration from Ethiopia.
On Nov. 15, Tami Plank of the Stevens County Historical Society and Museum, and local attorney and lecturer Deb Economou focused on local immigration trends and legal issues affecting the influx.
At the first forum, Gross explained the background of immigration in the United States. He stated that the greater number of people came looking for a new economic life or for more religious freedom than could be found in pre-1860's Europe. They arrived with a hunger for land and a less regimented job market.
The fact that immigration from the 1860's on was a family affair encouraged the clustering of ethnic groups. This led eventually to tensions because of the homogeneity of language, customs, and traditions.
Since government is decentralized, the burdens of paying for services to the immigrants fell to cities and states, causing confrontation and isolation of the various groups. Gross said that not all immigrants wish to become Americanized. Although the U.S. is more globalized than ever before, many groups do not desire assimilation, even though they accept economic change more quickly.
Like those who came before them, they do hold to their core values tightly, he said.
All immigrants do not do well for reasons related to the context of their departure from their native country and the context of their often unwelcomed arrival.
Gashaw shared his personal history of immigration. A native of Ethiopia, he was forced by political factors to leave his country. He spoke of the financial and emotional difficulties facing immigrants, many of whom come with the hope that someday they can return to their country of origin.
Government restrictions on visas in some cases occur because of a lottery and quotas. Gashaw said that many Africans are highly educated and qualified, hoping that coming to America will offer greater opportunities for their children.
The discussion by audience participants left many questions about immigration unanswered: Why are federal policies still so restrictive? Should we worry about the brain drain from abroad? Will the effect of immigration be to make rich nations richer and poor nations poorer? Can we help other nations become better?
The second phase of the Learning Unlimited immigration forum dealt with local circumstances.
Is Stevens County an example of a "melting pot" of immigrants? Plank, historian and researcher at the Stevens County Historical Society and Museum, posed that question to the audience during the forum’s second phase, "The New Challenges of American Immigration."
The forum was Nov. 15 at the Morris Senior Center.
Plank's PowerPoint presentation suggested two aspects of the term "melting pot." It can be viewed either as an example of acculturation in which differing elements of several cultures are borrowed and melded to create a new culture, as may seem to have happened with our Minnesota Norwegians and Swedes. Or it may be seen as assimilation, where one group becomes so absorbed by another that it disappears, exemplified by what happened to Germans because of World War I and World War II.
Immigration history in Stevens County begins about 1866, Plank said. Before that time the area was inhabited by Dakota Indians.
Plank outlined the growth of six predominant groups of settlers, showing how the population of each grew or declined through the years to 1910. Although people from eastern states were not the largest group, their influence on Americanizing other immigrant groups was exceptional. Of particular interest was the St. Lawrence Colony, members of which split from the original group in 1871 and came to the area still known as Yankee Ridge north of Morris, Plank said.
Her presentation included many pictures of the Norwegians, Swedes, Germans, Irish, and Canadians, who, together with the "States" or Yankees and the Apostolics, comprised the major groups of immigrants in the county. Later, groups of Vietnamese and Hmong moved on to other cities and states, with little evidence left of their sojourn here. Hispanics are now the area’s most significant immigrant group, along with the diversity in the UMM student body and faculty.
Plank concluded with the question: Is Stevens County a melting pot or a salad bowl?
"Perhaps a better question would be," Plank said, "have our various ethnic groups of all sizes been so assimilated that no uniqueness of any one culture remains, or have our ethnic groups been so acculturated that elements from the various cultures have come together to form a new blended culture."
Economou, lecturer in management at UMM and attorney in the offices of Martin, Nelson, Glasrud and Klopfleisch in Morris, spoke about the legal and economic aspects of immigration.
She cited statistics from various sources indicating that immigration into the U.S. is near historic heights, with the greatest influx from Mexico and Central America, making it the current hot topic politically, economically, and socially.
Various laws over the years have changed the eligibility of foreigners to emigrate, the latest being the 1996 legislation which forged more penalties and re-defined the term "status" applied to those who seek entrance. The law is very complex and creates many problems in deciding who belongs in which classification, Economou said. Stricter enforcement of current laws is needed, even though many of the provisions are unrealistic and subject to several interpretations.
Audience discussion groups felt that immigration is not a big problem in Morris or Stevens County. Income sent by both legal and illegal immigrants to their relatives in their native countries helps keep those countries more stable. The English language should be learned and used particularly to help children adjust educationally.
It was pointed out that early immigrants came from agrarian settlements to an agrarian United States; now our immigrants come from agrarian backgrounds into a highly industrialized setting. If they come from a no-job situation in their own countries, they have little or no structure in their lives, posing further problems.
The National Issues Forums are presented by Learning Unlimited to provide opportunities for civil and rational discourse dealing with local and national issues.
For more information on these and other Learning Unlimited programs, call Phyllis Gausman at (320) 589-2299 or Elaine Simonds-Jaradat at (320) 589-4394, extension 7.
"The University of Minnesota, Morris will host Soup and Substance on Monday, November 2, 2009, at 6 p.m. in the Alumni Room in the Student Center. The event provides an open forum for members of Stevens County and the campus community to discuss issues of local, regional, national, and international importance. Everyone is invited to join the discussion on immigration and to enjoy complimentary chili and corn bread.
Soup and Substance–named for the pairing of a delicious meal with meaningful dialogue–is open to all members of the community to share experiences and perspectives. The event provides a space in which all voices are heard, including those sometimes marginalized. People with direct topic experience facilitate the discussion.
The November event will explore immigration to the United States. Immigration, which has received significant media attention in recent years, affects nearly every community in the United States, including ours. Soup and Substance will explore reasons for immigration, immigrant experiences, and community impact. Local service providers will join the discussion and provide information on Stevens County area volunteer opportunities that touch the lives of immigrant populations.
Argie Manolis, Office of Community Engagement coordinator, states: "The foreign born population of Stevens County has climbed rapidly in recent years, resulting in an increase in the racial, ethnic, and linguistic diversity of the area. Immigration has prompted changes in our community and represents an opportunity for us to reflect on strategies for creating an inclusive and supportive living environment for everyone."
The Office of Community Engagement sponsors Soup and Substance, a monthly campus event. For more information, contact student representative Matthew Johnson at 320-589-3349 or joh06876 at morris.umn.edu."
"MINNEAPOLIS -- Immigrants are important to Minnesota's economy, especially for rural areas, a new report indicates.
"Immigration stimulates job creation," according to the business coalition report. "As industries expand and hire new workers, jobs are created to maintain this larger workforce and to supply its needs for goods and services. Without new, young workers, certain sectors of the economy will continue to contract. By one estimate, if immigrants were removed from the labor force, Minnesota would lose over 24,000 permanent jobs and $1.2 billion in personal income."
The report was prepared by the state Chamber of Commerce, Agri-Growth Council, Nursery and Landscape Association, Milk Producers Association and Hospitality Minnesota. Authors were professor Katherine Fennelly and graduate student Anne Huart of the University of Minnesota.
A Thursday panel discussion at the university showed widespread agreement among professors, business leaders and even a Mexican government official. All said immigrants can help the economy.
State Demographer Tom Gillaspy said Minnesota's labor force growth is about to take a massive hit as baby boomers reach retirement age. Without immigrants to take over the jobs, the state's economy will falter, he said. The average age of a Minnesota worker today is 18 years older than it was in 1998, he added, and many immigrants are younger and less educated people who will take jobs that now may go vacant.
By 2020, Gillaspy said, more Minnesotans will be retired than in school, a first for the state.
Immigrants "fill in the gaps almost perfectly," added professor Raymond Robertson of Macalester College.
Fennelly said one of the major problems facing immigrants who want to work is the length of time it takes to receive work visas.
"We have an enormous need for a younger workforce," she said, but federal laws are slowing down immigration.
Foreign-born people account for the majority of new Minnesota workers.
About 334,000 foreign-born people lived in Minnesota in 2007, 6.5 percent of the population, half of the national percentage.
The report's authors say that federal officials need to reform immigration laws, including granting more visas so immigrants can fill open jobs. At the same time, the report says, the state must improve immigrants' high school graduation rates and should provide more job-training programs.
Immigrants hold both high-skill and low-skill jobs.
Nationally, a quarter of physicians are foreign born, as are 40 percent of engineers with doctoral degrees.
Rural Minnesota is especially hard hit by doctor shortages. Those communities are home to 13 percent of Minnesotans, but only 5 percent of the state's doctors live in them.
One problem the report points out is a shortage of 8,000 registered nurses in rural Minnesota, but it takes an average of six years for an immigrant nurse to be grated legal residence status.
As the population ages, many rural jobs will be affected.
"The consequences of a graying population in rural Minnesota communities include a smaller workforce, school closings and shrinking consumer bases for local businesses, to name a few," the report says.
Meat and poultry processing jobs have been increasingly filled with Hispanic, African and Southeast Asian immigrants. That has prevented a more severe rural population loss.
Those foreign-born residents helped improve the economy in counties that otherwise would have lost population.
Minnesota schools should thank immigrants, the report says. "Given the striking declines in enrollment that would have occurred without Latino children, it is clear that the children of immigrants are keeping many rural schools from closing or consolidating. This is significant because, even with the enrollment of children of immigrants, between 2001 and 2006, 75 percent of Minnesota school districts experienced declining enrollments."
While Mexico provides most immigrants, that may be about to end, according to Ana Luisa Fajer Flores, consul general of Mexico in St. Paul.
In about 10 years, Mexicans will not be leaving their home country as much, she said. In the meantime, Flores added, immigrants are in the United States and Americans need to integrate them into society.
----
The full report is on the Web: "
"
WASHINGTON -- Federal agents arrested 230 people Tuesday in their raid of the Swift & Co. meat-packing plant in Worthington, and another 1,052 at five other Swift plants in different states, officials of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said today in Washington.>
By Brady Averill, Star Tribune
Ex-Enron CEO Skilling enters Minnesota prison
Ballet school not for the faint of heart
WASHINGTON -- Federal agents arrested 230 people Tuesday in their raid of the Swift & Co. meat-packing plant in Worthington, and another 1,052 at five other Swift plants in different states, officials of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement said today in Washington.
Of those, 65 people were charged with identity theft crimes, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said.
"These were not victimless crimes," Chertoff said.
None of the people charged with identity theft was in Worthington. The rest of the detainees were held on suspected violations of immigration laws.
The arrested workers were from Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Peru, Laos, Sudan, Ethiopia and other countries.
The raid was the result of an ICE investigation that began in February, when agents learned that large numbers of illegal workers may have used Social Security numbers belonging to U.S. citizens and using them to work at Swift.
Julie Myers, assistant secretary of homeland security for ICE, said that people in the Criminal Alien Program (CAP) who were interviewed last winter admitted that they had assumed other identities to work at Swift.
ICE also got referrals from police and received tips from a hotline.
"These factors led us to open an investigation," she said.
The Federal Trade Commission is currently notifying victims.
No criminal or civil action is being taken against Swift at this time, because it participated in the program in good faith, Chertoff said.
Swift is part of a government Basic Pilot program that helps detect fake Social Security numbers, but it doesn't catch people who are using authentic documents belonging to other people. It isn't a "magic bullet" for every single problem, Chertoff said.
The company tried to prevent the one-day raid and filed an injunction in a U.S. District Court, proposing phased workplace enforcement over several weeks or months instead. ICE rejected the proposal.
U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson wrote in her denial of the injunction that Swift interviewed 450 suspect employees at several plants between October and November and found around 90 percent of the suspect employees were using fake documents or were not legally eligible to work in the United States. Over 400 workers were terminated or quit.
Neither the plant nor ICE knows the whereabouts of those 400 workers.
Tuesday's arrests were part of stronger workplace enforcement, ICE officials said. In April, ICE agents arrested 1,187 illegal workers at more than 40 IFCO Systems North America Inc. locations. They also arrested seven current and former IFCO managers, charging them with harboring illegal workers for financial gain.
Advocates of stricter immigration control praised the raids and pointed out that they targeted people suspected of committing other crimes in addition to being in the U.S. illegally.
"I'm glad that ICE is enforcing our immigration laws in light of the illegal immigration crisis we face across the country," Sen. Wayne Allard, R-Colo., said in a statement.
The raids were denounced by Swift and by worker and immigrant advocacy groups as an attack on civil liberties.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Brady Averill • baverill@startribune.com
FYI
-----Original Message-----
From: Trang Nguyen [mailto:trang.nguyen@ilcm.org]
Sent: Thursday, December 21, 2006 10:16 AM
To:
Subject: Worthington Raids
"
Hello Everyone!
I just wanted update everyone on the Worthington Raid last week. Here are some events that have been observed by some of our attorneys and an article. Please spread the information because mainstream media misses these aspects.
I am coordinating an effort to write letters to our politicians to show our communities stand on this raid. Basic civil rights were taken away. If you, your students, or staff would like to be involved in this please e-mail me back and I will keep you updated on the project. Worthington also needs many supplies like food, money for child care, gas money because families are detained in other states like Iowa, etc. Many families have no income for the next months for fear of deportation and/or the "breadwinner" has been detained and possible deported. If you would like coordinate a food drive in your school or office or send donations etc. Here are the contacts to send donations and food.
Worthington Area Chamber of Commerce
Darlene Maklin
1121 3rd Avenue Worthington, MN 56187
507-372-2919
Community Connectors
507-372-4664
Official Article from Newspaper:
http://www.startribune.com/462/story/873328.html
Observations:
ICE Press releases claim this was a targeted enforcement operation with
spokesman
Tim Counts
claiming it was not a "raid." This is not what we saw
yesterday.
The raid started about 8:30 with ICE and state troopers limiting access
and
exit from the plant. ICE met with senior management of Swift who then
started
to pull people off the kill floor. They were directed to the cafeteria
where
50-70 ICE agents were at. People were immediately asked if they were
citizens,
if they had papers. Some people were
handcuffed immediately. Witnesses
state
that white workers were allowed to claim USC status and directed away
immediately.
People of color who claimed to be USC had to prove it. We spoke to one
USC
who was detained in plastic handcuffs for several hours; witnesses have
identified
two other naturalized citizens who had the same happen. We were told
that
one USC remains in custody. Numerous LPRs, TPS, etc..., were detained
for
at least hours in plastic cuffs. Some had their LPR card in their
locker,
others left it at home. One woman said her purse had been stolen at
work
before, so she left her card at home because it was difficult and
expensive
to replace. This operation did not target individuals suspected of
"identity
theft" or involvement in false document rings. It swept up every
non-white
worker at Swift.
We spoke to one family where both parents of a 2,3, and 12 year old
were
detained. Other primary caregivers were detained when children had
health
issues. ICE denied entrance to the plant to one person with Honduran
TPS,
whose EAD was expired, but whose automatic extension made her EAD good
until
Jan. 2007. The show of force was overwhelming. After initial interview
in
the cafeteria, people were interviewed in room and processed. The room
had
15-20 ICE agents in it, 5 more flanking the exit door, and 50 more in
line
in the hallway right outside the door. John
Connelly, of Washington DC
ICE,
told us that everyone was "free to go"if they requested --- didn't
appear
that way to us. It was a very coercive environment. Once cuffed, people
were
yelled at to sit down. If they complained about the ties hurting, they
were
told to sit comfortably. We saw numerous people, including LPRs, with
red
marks and contusions on their wrists hours after they were
released.
Later, when lawyers attempted to enter Camp Dodge (in Iowa) where detainees where
held. They were denied access because this is military base and only military personnel
may enter. After pressure from state governement (senators and the govenor) the
camp was open to Attorneys. Locally, in worthington, there are still approximately 60-70
detainees in Nobles County Jail in Worthington. Most of who will be/are represented by ILCM and
volunteer attoneys.
Trang Nguyen
Education Coordinator
Immigrant Law Center of MN
450 N Syndicate St. Suite 175 St. Paul, MN 55104
651-641-1011
trang.nguyen@ilcm.org www.ilcm.org
"
2901 Metro Drive, Suite 100
Bloomington, MN 55425.
*NOTE: "In order to visit this office or to speak with an Immigration Service Officer, you must have an appointment scheduled by USCIS, or you must schedule an INFOPASS appointment, on the USCIS website. Kiosks are available in our lobby for you to make an INFOPASS appointment."
"
Population Notes contains a brief overview of immigration in Minnesota since the 1970s and outlines how the demographic center obtains data about immigrant groups and calculates its estimates. Estimates for 2004 are calculated for Latinos, Hmong, Somalis, Vietnamese, Russians, Laotians, Cambodians and Ethiopians."
"This local site is a good source of information on some of the major cultural groups represented in Minnesota, such as Hmong, Somali, Russian, Lao, Vietnamese and Hispanic."
more info... "The foundation published an informational booklet called Immigration in Minnesota: Discovering Common Ground in 2004. You can download or order this publication from the website. There is also a menu at the top of the page that provides a quick overview about some of the different groups of immigrants. There is information about population, demographics, economics and an interesting section called Life in Minnesota: Challenges and Considerations."
"... is the immigration resource center for The Advocates for Human Rights. The Advocates has received international recognition for a broad range of innovative programs to promote human rights and prevent the violation of those rights. It provides investigative fact finding, direct legal representation, collaboration for education and training, and a broad distribution of publications. The Advocates has produced more than 50 reports documenting human rights practices in more than 20 countries; educated over 10,000 students and community members on human rights issues; and provided legal representation and assistance to over 3,000 disadvantaged individuals and families."
Stories
Journeys 2008, an annual book project (online format in the link) by the Minnesota Literacy Council
"Depicts scenes at the Immigration Depot and a nearby dock on Ellis Island. Appears to show, first, a group of immigrants lined up to board a vessel leaving the island, then another group arriving at the island and being directed off of the dock and into the Depot by a uniformed official."
"
The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) administers a test to all immigrants applying for citizenship. For years, these questions have been selected from among the following list of 100. How would you do? Many, you will find simple. Others are not so easy. In all cases, the answer USCIS wants to hear is given. (Study Materials and Guides)
"In the interest of creating a more standardized, fair, and meaningful naturalization process, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) recently completed a multi-year redesign of the naturalization test. The revised test, with an emphasis on the fundamental concepts of American democracy and the rights and responsibilities of citizenship, will help encourage citizenship applicants to learn and identify with the basic values we all share as Americans."
"USA (MNN) ― The Great Commission applies to all believers, but not everyone is called to be a missionary overseas. That doesn't mean you're not called to international missions, though.
There are many ways to do international missions right in your own backyard; one significant way is to reach out to the immigrant population around you. These are people who have traveled a long way and must work through difficult and stringent legal systems. And they may not know anyone at all.
IMMIGRANT PATHWAY Institute is a 40-hour Basic Immigration Law training offered in collaboration by Immigrant Hope and World Relief. This class surveys a wide range of topics in immigration law, including naturalization, family-based visas, admissibility and deportability issues, and legal ethics and practice.
Every immigrant hoping to live in the United States legally must pass through the complex, daunting immigration legal system. Learning about immigration law can give you an insight into the lives of the immigrants around you, awareness of how best to support and help them, and a new perspective on important national policy issues.
As you build relationships, opportunities to share the hope found in heaven can easily open, too.
Learning the basics of immigration law can also be the first step to starting a ministry at your church. Learning laws helps you toward gaining Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) accreditation, the government certification that allows non-attorneys to practice immigration law.
Earning BIA accreditation will allow you to expand the scope of services offered by your church or non-profit agency.
The Evangelical Free Church of America reports that the IMMIGRANT PATHWAY Institute will be offered at Trinity International University in Chicago, Illinois, May 14-18. The course will touch on all areas of immigration law and practice focusing on topics most relevant to those serving and representing low-income immigrants.
While you're there, you can even earn college credits from Trinity for attending IMMIGRANT PATHWAY Institute.
Apply to attend the IMMIGRANT PATHWAY Institute here. The application is free and is not a commitment to attend. The conference registration itself is $433. Registration is open until April 25, 2012. "
The Face of God in Hollywood
"DOOR, a ministry of Mennonite Mission Network, in collaboration with the Young Adult Volunteer program of the Presbyterian Church (PCUSA) offers young adult volunteers the opportunity to "dwell" one year in urban communities like Gregory Avenue in Hollywood, CA and explore vocation and what lifelong missional Christianity looks like in the 21st century.
In 2008, members of Alterna (LaGrange, GA) spent the entire summer living at DOOR's Community House (a partnership with First Presbyterian of Hollywood) in this predominantly working class Latino immigrant neighborhood.
This video is Alterna's attempts at providing you, the viewer, with snapshots of what incarnational ministry can look like and how fearless love truly does overcome a loveless fear that is paralyzing far too many of us.
For more information on the Dwell program go to www.doornetwork.org.
For information on the missional community, Alterna, go to www.alternacommunity.com.
For more information on loving immigrants like Christ does, befriend an immigrant near you. "
"Friends and relatives of two teens accused in the beating death of a Mexican immigrant struggled to contain their relief as not-guilty verdicts were announced on the most serious charges against the former high school football stars Friday.
Gasps filled the courtroom and some had to be restrained by sheriff's deputies as they tried to rush the defense table after Derrick Donchak, 19, and Brandon Piekarsky, 17, were acquitted of aggravated assault, reckless endangerment and ethnic intimidation for the death of Luis Ramirez.
Piekarsky was also found not guilty of third-degree murder for the death of Ramirez, who died of blunt force injuries after an encounter with the teens last summer.
However, the all-white jury of six men and six women from Schuylkill County jury found Piekarsky and Donchak guilty of simple assault.
The case drew national attention to the small town of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, highlighting race relations and polarizing the community on who was to blame for the incident.
Lawyers for the teens never denied that their clients were involved in a physical altercation with Ramirez on a residential street the night of July 12.
Instead, they tried to cast Ramirez as the aggressor, and suggested that the other teens involved in the tangle of punches and blows were to blame.
"In my mind it was the lack of evidence to tie these kids to the serious charges that they brought," defense lawyer Frederick Fanelli said.
A cast of witnesses provided conflicting accounts regarding who initiated the encounter and who exactly did what, complicating prosecutors' efforts to assign blame.
"If you ask most prosecutors who are dealing with multiple defendants, and in this particular case there were at least four, it is extraordinary difficult to clear the fog of a fight," truTV anchor Ashleigh Banfield said.
The 25-year-old Mexican immigrant had settled in Shenandoah a year before his death with his wife, a lifelong resident of the faltering mining town, and their young children.
He was walking down a residential street with a friend when he encountered the group of teens, who had been drinking earlier in the evening. Donchak was convicted of providing alcohol to the other teens who were involved in the confrontation, including a juvenile co-defendant and another teen who pleaded guilty in federal court for his role in the fight.
Prosecutors alleged that the teens baited the Ramirez into a fight with racial epithets, provoking an exchange of punches and kicks that ended with Ramirez convulsing in the street, foaming from the mouth. He died two days later in a hospital.
Piekarsky was accused of delivering a fatal kick to Ramirez's head after he was knocked to the ground.
As they poured out of courthouse, the teens' supporters shouted "I was right from the start" and "I'm glad the jury listened" at cameras that caught the late-night verdict.
But Gladys Limon, a spokeswoman for the Mexican-American Legal Defense and Education Fund, said the jury had sent a troubling message.
"The jurors here [are] sending the message that you can brutally beat a person, without regard to their life, and get away with it, continue with your life uninterrupted," she said.
"In this case, the message is that a person who may not be popular in society based on their national origin or certain characteristic has less value in our society," she said.
The extent of Ramirez's injuries, which had left his brain oozing from his skull, according to medical testimony, should have sufficed for a conviction other than simple assault, Limon said.
"The acts here were egregious in brutality and it's just outrageous and very difficult to understand how any juror could have had reasonable doubt, especially as to the aggravated assault and the reckless enganderment charges," she said.
advertisement
Limon said her group intends to press the Department of Justice to file federal charges against the teens.
"Luis Ramirez's family deserves vindication for his death," she said. "This incident has not only disrupted Luis Ramirez's family, but the entire community."
Political
Mike Huckabee's Immigration Policy
Religion
Rev. Jim Wallis Claims Criminalizing Illegals 'Would Make Obeying Jesus..
"After Jesus was born, scholars from the East came to visit him in Bethlehem. They were supposed to report back to King Herod about the location of the new born king. But a dream advised them not to do so. Matthew's reason for reporting this incident is clear. Herod planned to kill the baby Jesus.
Then Matthew tells us that Joseph also had a dream. In this dream an angel told him to take Mary and Jesus and flee to Egypt, because Herod was out to kill Jesus. Joseph obeyed the angel and fled to Egypt with the baby and his mother. There they lived to the death of Herod, who died in 4BCE..
Finally we have the words of the writer of the book of Hebrews. This writer said that all of the faithful are but aliens/strangers/sojourners on this earth. Even though one nation claims this plot of land and another nation claims that plot of land, in God's eyes, this is not our home: "All those who died in faith . . . confessed that they were stranger and foreigners on the earth. They desired a better country, that is a heavenly one. . . ." ..
I am not here this morning to propose any political solution. But as Christians, I urge you to view this issue with compassion—loving the immigrant, even as we love ourselves and remembering that even though this is a world divided into nations and borders and fences and my land and your land and our land and their land—remember it is One God who is the God of all nations. One God loves this whole wide world so much. And One God who sent Jesus into this world to save this whole wide world.
"TWIN CITIES — The Department of Homeland Security estimates that nearly 11 million unauthorized immigrants were living in the United States in January 2009. That number, however, was down nearly three quarters of a million from the previous January.
Numbers vary, but the reality is that the U.S. is home to millions of new immigrants—both authorized and unauthorized—and the Church as a whole and individual Christians have had to develop a response to this new reality.
Last fall, the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE) issued a resolution on immigration that has helped make the issue a national discussion point for millions of Evangelicals around the country. In its resolution, the NAE issued a call to action—based on biblical foundations—that urged, among others things:
• "That immigrants be treated with respect and mercy by churches. Exemplary treatment of immigrants by Christians can serve as the moral basis to call for government attitudes and legislation to reflect the same virtues.”
• "That the government recognize the central importance of the family in society by reconsidering the number and categories of visas for family reunifications, by dedicating more resources to reducing the backlog of cases in process, and by reevaluating the impact of deportation on families."
• "That immigration enforcement be conducted in ways that recognize the importance of due process of law, the sanctity of the human person, and the incomparable value of family.”.....
Changing attitudes
..Mayer agrees that Evangelicals have been late to the game when it comes to immigration reform. “Yes, in general, the Church has always lagged behind the culture 20-40 years,” he said. “This is both good and bad,” he continued. “It is good in that the Church needs to be separate from the world on many issues and look for Christian solutions and not worldly compromises. But it is bad where the Church should be engaged and leading the way and have the voice of truth and love and God’s perspective on key issues in the culture."...,
..ACTION BOX: For more information on the immigration resolution the NAE passed last year, visit www.nae.net/resolutions/347-immigration-2009...
"
This is a good site if you want to better inform yourself about the lives of refugees. There are facts and statistics about specific refugee groups and suggested reading about the refugee experience. If you have a student who is a refugee, and who is willing to talk about that experience, this site can be very thought provoking reading material for both you and the student."
"..As it relate to your immigration status: YOU ARE LEGAL and there is NOTHING your wife can do at this time to stop your immigration process, you have your conditional green card for two years. They CANNOT deport you!! Gather all evidence that your marriage was bonafide (house lease with your names, joint bank accounts, magazine subscriptions, bills in both names ids with same address etc). Also keep a record/copy of all these documents including photos, passports, socials, anything that shows that you co-habit as man and wife. The reason you need to keep a record of all these is just in case things get worse and divorce comes in the picture. Please note that even if you get divorce you can still obtain your permanent green card without the help of your wife. For now i think you should continue your research, gather your evidence, keep your mail and green card safe. Your immigration status is fine and will remain unaffected for the next 2 years or until you guys divorce even at which time you can file for your papers with out her ..
States
-Iowa
Immigrants changing Iowa's cities 03-1-2007
"In Iowa immigration is a big issue. According to the US government, the number of Hispanics there has increased by 150 per cent since 1990. Mike Kirsch takes a look at the changing face of one Iowa town, as the candidates make a final appeal to voters before the all important Iowa caucus."
Biblical View of Illegal Immigrants and Immigration
"Another video of the work we've done with the immigrant families with text from the Bible, stating God's views on immigrants and how citizens should treat them. It's not the most comfortable viewpoint to take, but it's the view God takes so it's worth considering. For a higher quality verison: http://www.dailymotion.com/anchorboy2..."
Countries
-Germany
Turkish immigrants face difficult road in Germany
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Posted: 21 February, 2008
* Topics in this story:
* german
* , immigrants
* , jobs
* , language
* , turkish (Mission Network News)
Germany (MNN) ― Turkish immigrants to Germany often face a difficult transition. They look forward to a new life but meet a limited job market and housing options that are less than enticing.
Salma was one such immigrant. She anticipated the reunion with her family in Germany and freedom for her and her son. Stepping off the train was the beginning of the transition-- made more difficult by her Turkish last name.
One Greater Europe Mission missionary, who will be called "Beth," is helping Turkish immigrants like Salma. The German government requires that immigrants take 600 hours of German language classes to encourage integration. It can be easy for Turkish immigrants to be isolated from and rarely interact with Germans since Turkish communities are so abundant.
Beth, who was taking classes at a community center, helps immigrants learn German. In return, her Turkish language skills improve, and she is able to share the Bible with the students. Her goals are to build relationships with the immigrants and to increase interaction between Germans and Turkish immigrants.
Beth was able to share the Bible with a new immigrant friend this past Christmas. The woman asked Beth if she could borrow the Bible after she read a passage about Christ's birth.
Almost four percent of the German population is Muslim, and most of that is accounted for in Turkish immigrants. There are opportunities to be the hands and feet of Christ to these people even if you can't move to Europe. GEM asks that you pray.
" Illegal immigrants in Gaza
They are physicians, engineers and executives...and all are illegal immigrants in their own country. After the 1993 Olso Accords, Israel gave them a temporary visas to work in Gaza, but has refused to renew the visas."
-Hong Kong
"The terms emigrant and immigrant are often incorrectly used, creating confusion at best, and annoyance of English teachers at worst. In general understanding the proper usage can help dispel confusion or quell the rage of would be wordsmiths.
An emigrant leaves their land to live in another country. The person is emigrating to another country. An immigrant is a person who once resided somewhere else and now lives in your country.
For example, a Swedish woman decides to emigrate to America. To herself, and to the country of Sweden, the woman is an emigrant to America. To her new American neighbors, the woman is an immigrant from Sweden, implying she has been somewhere else, and now is here, wherever here happens to be. So she has been an emigrant, in coming to America, and now she is a Swedish immigrant.
The term emigrant implies the process of travel. And emigration is the actual act of relocation from country. The person going from one place to another is in the process of emigrating. Our Swedish woman remains an emigrant to people of her country. To other Americans, she is an immigrant, because she has traveled from somewhere else.
During the French Revolution, people who had left France because of the escalating tension and violence in France were treated disparagingly if they returned to France. A person might be labeled an Emigrant, if he or she returned to France during the Reign of Terror or shortly thereafter. The term was meant to signify perhaps criminal behavior in fleeing France, as well as the fact that such people emigrated from France.
Thus when we discuss our forbears who immigrated to the United States, we are in error. Our forbears were emigrants to the United States. To their country of origin, these people were emigrants. However, since we are US citizens, at least in this example, our forbears were immigrants, implying they had come from somewhere not here.
In general, the distinction can be reduced to the prepositions “to” and “from.” When you are an emigrant, you emigrate to a place. When you are an immigrant, you have immigrated from some place. Since technically you can be both, it makes matters quite confusing.
If one can remember “emigrate to” and “immigrate from” this helps to separate the emigrant from the immigrant. As well it may be helpful to realize that an immigrant is a new member of one’s society. An emigrant, on the other hand, is leaving one’s society in search of greener pastures.
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