By Andrew Malekoff© April 2018
Imagine being American in every way except on paper and knowing that if
you are the victim of violent crime you cannot report it out of fear of being deported.
This is the sad reality for nearly 800,000 young immigrants who found hope in
DACA.
If you’ve heard the acronym but are not familiar with DACA, it refers
to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, a federal program that began in 2012
permitting any person who was brought into the U.S. before the age of 16 the
temporary right to live, study and work legally in America, providing they meet
certain criteria including no criminal record and attending in high school or
college, or serving in the military.
According to the Pew Research Center, two-thirds of current
DACA recipients are 25 or younger, many of whom were brought to the U.S. as
children so they might escape persecution, violence and poverty for the promise
of a better life.
One young immigrant, Rodrigo Trejo, shared his story with United We
Dream, the largest immigrant youth-led organization in the country: “When I was
in the 11th grade my step dad was deported to Mexico, but he had a conversation
with me before he was sent back. He told me that I was going to have to be the
man of the house because he didn’t think he was ever coming back. I didn’t know
what he was trying to say at the time, until he passed away crossing the U.S
border. He couldn’t bear to be away from his family.”
Although Rodrigo became depressed and dropped out of school he bounced
back. He reenrolled and graduated at the age of 20. Soon thereafter he applied
for DACA in order to continue his education. “I plan to continue my studies and
want to help others who have the potential of becoming someone great but
because of similar life circumstances, don’t believe in themselves,” he said.
On September 5, 2017, U.S. Attorney General (AG) Jeff Sessions pronounced,
"I am here today to announce that the program known as DACA that was
effectuated under the Obama administration is being rescinded [effective March
5, 2018].”
On January 9, 2018, four months after AG Session’s announcement, a U.S. District Judge temporarily blocked the Trump
administration from ending DACA, thus allowing recipients to
renew their protected status for two years, re-affirming their legal legitimacy
to remain in the U.S. A subsequent appeal of the judge’s ruling to keep DACA
going failed.
If DACA were to be permanently rescinded it would prevent young
immigrants like Rodrigo from applying for deportation protections and work
permits, exacerbating the isolation, uncertainty, hopelessness and terror that
preceded DACA becoming law.
If you follow national news, there is a cat-and-mouse game being played
with DACA recipients in our nation’s capital. Let’s not lose sight of the fact
that what is at stake is the physical and emotional well-being of young people
like Rodrigo who came to the U.S. as children by no fault of their own.
In addition to the shifting sentiments expressed by the president,
there is an organized anti-immigrant movement underway in the U.S. led by groups
such as the Federation for American Immigrant Reform (FAIR), Center for
Immigration Studies and Numbers USA. These nativist groups advocate for white
European power and political control, and paint undocumented immigrants with a
broad criminalized brush.
The issue of immigration in the U.S. is much broader than DACA.
Nevertheless, we need to stand up to protect these young people from being
rounded up and sent away. If you believe in human rights, doing nothing is not
an option.
Published in the Long Island Weekly in April 2018
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