Chasing a Dream
Stories of Immigration
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Freedom rides through CASA
of Maryland
BY ETHAN GOFFMAN
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PHOTO: ETHAN GOFFMAN
Seleth Selebangu, one of the day
laborers who wait daily in front of CASA of Maryland.
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Busloads of youth set out
across the country on a seemingly quixotic task: to bring
justice and civil rights to a marginalized and exploited population.
The freedom riders of the 1960s? Yes, and also the immigrant
freedom riders of 2003, who are striving to build a monument--not
of stone, but of memory, that will serve as a kind of psychological
rallying point for future action.
The buses began their long rides from the sprawling corners
of the United States, from Seattle and Los Angeles, from Houston
and Miami, passing through and gathering riders from more
than a hundred cities. The ride through Montgomery County
approached the end of their long journey to the nation's capital
and, finally, to a vast rally in the longtime immigrant capital
of the United States, New York City.
For Montgomery County, with its huge and diverse immigrant
population, the ride is of stark significance. In the year
2000, according to the U.S. Census, Montgomery County was
27 percent foreign-born, with some 100 languages spoken. Devotees
of ethnic food can track the movements of immigrants through
the onrush of flavors available in Silver Spring restaurants.
This huge immigrant presence explains why the Maryland portion
of the freedom rides was routed through CASA of Maryland on
October 4. CASA served as the rallying point for the Maryland
caravan to New York City, and since 1985, CASA of Maryland
has served immigrants throughout the county, acting as a safe
pick-up area for day laborers that ensures a reasonable wage,
and engaging in social services concerning education, health,
legal issues, and employment.
Not surprisingly, CASA was central to Maryland organizing
for the immigrant freedom rides. On October 1, vanloads of
travelers set off from CASA to D.C. area events. Both Washington
and Baltimore held interfaith breakfasts to welcome the traveling
immigrants. Subsequent rallies advocated in-state tuition
for the children of immigrants who attended Maryland schools,
as well as supporting asbestos removal workers and laundry
workers. Speeches, music, singing, chanting, dancing, and
poetry punctuated these events.
The labor-oriented nature of these rallies makes clear the
major role unions now hold regarding immigrant rights. Kim
Propeack, Advocacy Director at CASA of Maryland, explains
that this marks a major shift in union positions since the
1980s. At that time, most unions opposed immigration, believing
that it undercut American workers and brought down wages.
"Over the years," explains Propeack, "the AFL
had come to realize that that was not a strategy that worked."
Because unemployed and desperate workers will find their
way into the United States, legally or illegally, documented
and organized immigrants are less likely to destabilize job
markets. In the past decade, immigrant workers-underpaid and
devoid of basic work safety, health, and overtime rights-have
been the most eager to join unions.
"Immigrants are breathing new life into the union movement,"
Propeack says, as exemplified by the Justice for Janitors
campaign. Unions also came to realize that failing to protect
one group of workers undercuts bargaining power on a broader
scale.
"All workers suffer when it's easier to abuse undocumented
workers," Propeack says.
While the right to organize is one major touchstone of the
immigrant freedom riders campaign, perhaps even more prominent
is the legalization drive. Immigrant legalization was garnering
great national support, from Republicans and Democrats alike,
until the events of September 11, 2001 spurred a new wave
of fear. With time, and a growing realization that immigration
and terrorism are unrelated, the legalization effort is being
revived.
Propeack argues, "At a basic level, we don't accept
people as worthless because they're from a different country.
If you're religious, I do not believe that there is a biblical
justification for that."
The argument was well recounted in the recent debates for
governor of California: undocumented immigrants are driven
here under conditions of desperate poverty and political repression.
They spend years doing crucial jobs others don't want or have
time for--from providing day care for children to working
heavy construction to cleaning toilets. Their children grow
up and attend school here, yet they lack such basic rights
as in-state tuition, driver's licenses, and the freedom to
visit family members across borders.
Propeack also asks why, in an international world, in which
capital and consumer goods circulate freely, people should
not do the same.
"This is an economically-driven phenomenon," she
states. "You cannot have free flow of capital, free flow
of companies, free flow of litigation, and free flow of products,
and not expect free flow of bodies."
For the organizers of the immigrant freedom rides, the answer
to problems of depressed wages and conditions is not stricter
control of borders, but better organization of workers.
Most current legalization proposals involve some form of
immediate amnesty for those currently in the United States,
and a streamlined path to residence for new immigrants. In
Maryland, legislative efforts center around the Dream Act,
which would allow in-state college tuition for youth who went
through local high schools but have undocumented parents.
This is the situation faced by scores of kids in Montgomery
County schools, many of them superior students. Proposals
to allow driver's licenses to undocumented immigrants are
intended to reduce the number of illegal drivers on the road.
Determined to dramatize the plight of immigrant workers,
and to bring labor and legalization issues to the forefront,
a convoy of 11 buses and six passenger vans set out from CASA
in the gray hours of the morning of October 4. This was the
culmination of a six-month whirlwind of organization coordinated
across the country via telephone, fax, and e-mail, and includ-ing
fundraisers, press events, newsletters, fliers, bus rentals,
t-shirt design, provisioning of food and water, and more.
The bus I took included over half of the contingent of 75
sent by Montgomery County. Spanish, English, and French phrases
alternated rapidly, flitting through the crisp morning air.
Latecomers trickled down the aisle, along with sandwiches
and bottles of water. A civil nervousness hung in the air.
Finally, the bus started up--not with a roar, but with a polite
sigh. The sun slowly awakened Maryland's hills, woods, gas
stations, and strip malls.
My seatmate, Seleth Selebangu, agreed to an interview. Like
most on this bus, he is one of the day laborers who wait daily
in front of CASA of Maryland. During his year in America,
he has worked land-scaping, construction, and painting jobs.
SelebanguÊ arrived from the Central African Republic,
fleeing the civil war that has wracked his country, and needing
money to send home to his wife and children. He chose the
United States because "America is a good country; a powerful
country; a country of immigrants."
However, as for so many immigrants for so many years, Selebangu's
image of America did not fit the immediate reality.
"Maybe I came at the wrong time. I was thinking everything
would be easy," he says.
Much of the problem stems from the low status immigrants
face. Contractors, Selebangu explains, "don't see us
like equals." He complains of one who spoke down to him.
"He didn't know I used to be a bookkeeper," he
says. "I know I had gone to school more than he."
Because he does dangerous work, often on rooftops, Selebangu
is especially worried about his lack of medical insurance.
He remembers a time when he cut himself deeply and wanted
to quit for the day, but the contractor insisted he finish
the job, so he bandaged himself and worked on.
He finds the lifestyle too fast and the food unhealthy. Hospitality
is also a strong custom in Selebangu's home--another change
for him in America.
"I don't know my next door neighbors; they don't say
hello," he says. "I feel very lonely here."
For his first five months in America, Selebangu's financial
and legal status was uncertain. Then he got lucky, finding
a job taking care of an 85-year-old in Bethesda. This pays
his room and board, allowing him to send his day-labor wages
to his family. He also hopes to take advantage of educational
opportunities, and plans to study bookkeeping programs and
website design at Montgomery College.
We are interrupted by an enthusiastic Kim Propeack, who prompts
the bus into learning some basic chants in Spanish, English
and French. Various responsibili-ties are also worked out,
such as who will lead the different chants and who will hold
the banners. The buildings grow larger and more frequent,
and a hum of anticipation arises as the riders sense the approach
of New York City. I have time for one more interview.
José Garcia is Vice President of CASA's Workers' Association.
Like the numerous routes that the freedom rider buses have
taken across the country, the story of how he reached this
point is long and twisty. In English he cannot explain himself
with the fluency he desires, so we quickly switch to a translator.
In 1994, Garcia's son disappeared from their San Miguel,
El Salvador home. Hearing that his son might have moved to
the United States, Garcia followed him to North Carolina,
where he had gotten married. There, Garcia worked as a day
laborer. In 2001, after a dispute with his son and in a search
of better work, he moved to Greenbelt.
Again he worked as a day laborer, now under the auspices
of CASA of Maryland. The work was sporadic, and Garcia had
severe difficulty getting legalization papers. He tried three
times, had money stolen by a lawyer, and still couldn't attain
his papers or better work. Finally, this August, he received
his papers via a neighborhood store, and this September he
started a better job working eight to ten hours a day packaging
goods at a factory.
Acutely aware of the politics around immigrants' rights,
Garcia feels a keen sense of loss at the opportunity that
collapsed along with the collapse of the World Trade Center.
"Never in the U.S.," he says, "had so many
noted those rights. I can visualize it. Even Colin Powell
felt obliged to grant it."
Not only has this chance been lost but a new governor has
undercut Garcia's hopes for Maryland. He notes Robert Ehrlich's
opposition to the Dream Act, and to immigrant driver's licenses.
As we approach New York, Garcia remembers his last trip to
the city. "In the right lane was an opulent skyline.
In the left lane, many poor. This class of people are hidden,
as if they're meaningless, little rabbits," he says.
Someone spots the Statue of Liberty. Or is it? Yes, the famous,
if distant, outline emerges, followed by the Manhattan skyline.
People point and chat excitedly. There's the Empire State
Building. Where would the World Trade Center have been? But
our route keeps us distant from the most famous New York monuments.
We skirt the city and arrive in the massive parking lots
of Shea Stadium, joining scores of buses. After final instructions
to remain together, our group marches across the lot, over
a cement bridge to the freedom rally. A lively Latin band,
led by a heavyset singer dancing vigorously across an enormous
monitor, greets the gathering crowd.
Flags and signs wave boisterously. Sojourning waves of marchers
converge. AFL-CIO president John Sweeney begins a wave of
speeches. Although neatly separated into sections by iron
barriers, the crowd continues to grow. I gaze across oceans
of humanity, the tired, the poor, the masses taking a break
from their submissive huddling--for this one afternoon, at
least. How many are there? A hundred thousand? Who can count?
Union and immigrant leaders speak throughout the afternoon,
interrupted by spells of music. The CASA of Maryland group
has long since broken up, perhaps trickling, like me, to the
stands hawking zesty tacos and miniature flags at the far
end of the field, then wandering through the vast crowds cut
off from the original group.
The crowd has thinned. The afternoon seems to end anti-climactically.
Then one last singer ascends the stage, and the crowd surges
enthusiastically. It is Wyclef Jean, the Haitian hiphop singer
and former Fugees member. He whirls through a set of freedom
songs: No Woman No Cry, the Lord's Prayer, and a Jimi Hendrix-inspired
version of The Star-Spangled Banner. He speaks in English,
French Creole, Spanish, and the language of music, reminding
the crowd that he is one of them, that he arrived on these
shores an impoverished immigrant.
Heading home
The riders are sleeping. The major national television networks
all but ignored the immigrant freedom ride. Has it lived up
to its historic predecessor?
It is too soon to know. In cities across the country, newspapers
and local television stations ran prominent stories. Spanish-speaking
media also covered the rides in depth, as did the New York
Times and NPR. And surely the rides had a huge impact on the
tens of thousands who took part in them, and on the hundreds
of thousands--or, more likely, millions--who witnessed the
immigrant caravans roll by, and experienced the energy of
the speeches and rallies. In innumerable households and coffee
shop discussions, magazines, documentaries, and online discussions,
the ride will live on.
Propeack believes that the ride succeeded in its purpose,
which was to "unify and educate communities about the
importance of immigrants, the commitment of unions to the
immigrant community, and the recognition of...how a unified
workforce advances all workers."
Propeack's hope is that this ride creates a living, lasting
memory in the same way that the march on Washington,the 1963
freedom rides, or the Works Progress Administration did. If
the freedom rides do result in new legislation, this is only
one part in a larger story which emanates from the United
States' past and its long struggle for civil rights.
Yet it is also a global story, requiring a generous, and
complex, vision of the future. It is the story of the struggle
to recognize the rights and abilities of growing portions
of humanity. And it is the story of efforts to attain a globalism
for the many which crafts mechanisms of economic exchange
to benefit those who work and to allow the flowering of converging
cultures.
These issues are remarkably complex, and the path remains
unclear. If we are lucky, the immigrant freedom rides will
be an important step on this path.
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