Close To 1 Million Dreams Protected, 10.5 Million Dreams To Go

June 19, 2012

By Ju Hong, member of ASPIRE (Asian Students Promoting Immigrant Rights through Education)

Although I recently graduated from UC Berkeley with a major in Political Science, I am unable to use my degree to work because I am undocumented. Not only did I face a difficult time to finding ways to work, I also faced constant fear of deportation – until President Obama made an announcement last Friday to stop deportation and provide work permits to a selected group of DREAMers who meet requirements under a new immigration policy.

This historic announcement would not have been possible without the courageous DREAMers who stood up and shared their stories, held events and rallies, contacted elected officials, and led hunger strikes and civil disobedience actions despite risking deportation. After many years of collaborative efforts to demand for justice and equality, the federal government finally made a move to provide a very limited and temporary relief for many undocumented young people in this country.

For many years, I have lived in fear: The fear of facing deportation and of permanently leaving the country I called home; the fear of being separated from my friends, my family, and my community; the fear of not being accepted within my own community; the fear of contacting the police at a time of need; and the fear of losing my hope and dreams in graduating from college. Today, I feel liberated from these fears. Because of this announcement, I can better focus on preparing for my master’s degree program, provide for my family, and continue to advocate for the federal DREAM Act and Comprehensive Immigration Reform.

Prior to June 15, 2012, I was unable to get a job, apply for internships, or qualify for financial aid. Thus, I had to work more than thirty hours of week at a Japanese restaurant, mopping floors and washing dishes, getting paid below minimum wage under the table, while I commuted to school and enrolled as a full-time student at Laney College, Oakland. Sometimes I had to stay up all night to apply for limited scholarship opportunities to meet the deadlines. Today, I feel free from these obstacles. Because of this announcement, I will have open doors of new opportunities to use my degree to work and contribute back to society. Not only will I have the chance to work to support my schoolwork, but also I have capacity to support my family.  Like one of my fellow DREAMers said, “I feel I am normal again.”

With this announcement, an approximate 800,000 young peoples’ dreams are now protected, at least temporarily. This is huge victory for the undocumented community, but the fight is not over. There are thousands of other young DREAMers who are not eligible to apply for deferred action or work permits because of strict requirements under this announcement. For example, DREAMers who are over 30 years old cannot qualify to receive deferred action or work permits. Moving forward, we must stay involved and work with the Obama’s administration to include all DREAMers because they also have the right to DREAM.

Finally, we must continue to fight for the federal DREAM Act and Comprehensive Immigration Reform because this announcement is only a temporary solution. Now more than ever, we have strength, conviction, and power in our hands to organize, mobilize, and take collective actions to solve our broken immigration system. Soon, we will fulfill all the 11.5 million dreams.


Undocumented and Unafraid: May

March 25, 2011

 

By May, ASPIRE (Asian Students Promoting Immigrant Rights through Education) Member

In honor of National Coming Out Week: Undocumented and Unafraid we are featuring stories of API dreamers.  The DREAM Act would provide undocumented students that arrived before the age of 16 in the US a pathway to legalization.

I am undocumented. There, I wrote it. I have proclaimed it. And although those are just three simple words, the devastating thought behind them has been instilling fear and anxiety in my life ever since I was small. Until now.

I can get into the details of my family’s past, about how my PhD neurosurgeon and eastern medicine practitioner “Dr. Dad” survived his first few months in the United States as a dishwasher, about how after only one year he made enough to send the rest of his family, including his wife and twin daughters, to his new home in Oakland, CA, and about how my parents became entrepreneurs opening business after business only five years after immigrating, but I won’t get into it. That story has been repeated to no avail.

I can also get into the details of my own personal past, about how I learned enough English through ESL and watching TV from first grade that by the middle of second grade, I had no trouble getting A’s in all my classes, about how I took AP everything I can get my hands on in high school, about getting accepted into a prestigious university, and about how people ask me why I don’t have an accent or why aren’t I getting my driver’s license, but many people whom have the same dilemma as I do have the same experiences which they have already shared.

What I want to share are my experiences about planning my future and staying positive about the present. At this point in our immigration situation, I feel that I have nothing to lose and so I share.

Currently, I am in my 3rd year at UC Berkeley studying biology and am on the pre-med pathway. I cannot wait until I graduate! I hope to go to a healthcare vocational school afterward, maybe medical or physician’s assistant or an EMT/Paramedic. After that I hope to get a job doing what I have been training in school for a couple of years. Then I want to go into the Peace Corp. Maybe after that, I’ll apply to medical school (UCSF!) if I still think it’s the path I want to take. This is my ideal future. But this is the future I face. After graduating, I will have a BA degree from a prestigious university but I cannot get a job because I am not permitted to work in the US. Even if I do go to a vocational school, I cannot get a job afterward. The only things I can do are become a babysitter, or a nanny, or a tutor, or even a maid. Hopefully I can, at best, become a personal assistant. The Peace Corp is out of my reach because one has to be a US citizen in order to join. Medical school is just too expensive without any financial assistance and my parents have paid enough as it is for my undergraduate education.

Another aspiration I have is to get married to the man I love. I met him in my 2nd year of high school and it’s now been five years. He knows everything about me, including my status, and loves me anyway. It took me three years to finally tell him and ever since then, he has been supportive. We went to prom together, helped each other on college applications, fought and made up, taken care of each other when we were sick, distracted each other from homework, and everything else that all loving, young couples do. I want to get married because we truly and honestly love each other. But this is what the law automatically thinks. I want to get married because it’s a way for me to get my status changed from undocumented to legal. I am a fraud and our love is a lie. In order to prove that a marriage between us is real, we have to get a lawyer, go through an extensive interview process where family and friends are questioned about our relationship, we are questioned about intimate details like what kind of shampoo I use or what kind of razor he shaves with, have inspections of our home to make sure that we live together, and other fantastic ways that breach invasion of privacy. After all this, I will still have a three year probation period where I am issued temporary legalization. If we fail at any of these tasks, our love and marriage is deemed fake and I will be deported. I want to get married for love, but they will always assume that it’s a lie.

So how do I stay sane and even positive when my future looks so bleak? After years of lying to friends, avoiding conversations, and staying quiet I finally have had enough. I decided that even though my undocumented status is the most negative thing in my life, I will not let it take over. I will live the life I want, the life I and my family have been working hard for and will not take no for an answer. I have the mind and am just stubborn enough to keep trying. I can be sad and angry about it, but I would rather join ASPIRE and fight for what is right for all the other undocumented students who have worked just as hard and suffered just as much as I did. I have hope that something good will happen out of all this bad and all of our combined anger can generate enough noise to wake up the government to do the right thing. And when my love and marriage is investigated, I will comply with dignified anger the whole way through.


Undocumented and Unafraid: Fiona

March 18, 2011

By Fiona, ASPIRE (Asian Students Promoting Immigrant Rights through Education) Member

In honor of National Coming Out Week: Undocumented and Unafraid we are featuring stories of API dreamers.  The DREAM Act would provide undocumented students that arrived before the age of 16 in the US a pathway to legalization.


My name is Fiona and I am undocumented and unafraid.

In 2001, I came to this country with my father and sister from the Philippines. My mother had already been working here for over a year and was being petitioned by her employer to get a green card.  Both my parents decided that it was unhealthy for my sister and me to grow up without the presence of our mother in our lives so we immigrated to the US with the intention of adjusting our status in a few years. Unfortunately, the law firm used by my mother’s company was found guilty of committing fraud and this dramatically affected our case.

Our application was pending for a long time. And through those years, my family underwent a lot of emotional challenges: my parents got divorced and our family was torn apart because of it. My mother eventually remarried. My step father was able to adjust my mom and my younger sister’s immigration status, except for mine. Because I was over the age of 18 I couldn’t adjust my status with the rest of my family. Now I am in deportation proceedings. I’ve had to stand in front of an immigration judge to defend my right to stay in this country I call home.

At first, my mother forbade me from talking about my status to anyone. I didn’t even tell my extended family or close friends for a long time. This made me feel like I was facing this problem alone. I became depressed and felt hopeless, until I heard about the federal DREAM Act. This piece of legislation would give children who came to this country before the age of 16 a pathway to legalization if they attended two years of college or served two years in the military. I closely followed the news surrounding the DREAM Act. Last September, I found out that there was a rally in my neighborhood in support of the bill. This was my first time going to a rally but it was good to meet so many other young people in my situation.

Now I am an active member of ASPIRE, the first Asian undocumented student group. Even though the federal DREAM Act did not pass last year, I am still grateful that I was introduced to this great group of people. They give me hope and together we work toward informing others of the injustice of this immigration system, promoting higher education for other undocumented students, and ultimately, a way to prevent deportation of other DREAM Act eligible students like myself. I want others to know that it’s okay to be undocumented, we shouldn’t be ashamed of a situation we had no control over. We should do something about it and join groups like ASPIRE, because together is the only way we’re going to get justice.


Undocumented and Unafraid: Steve Li

March 16, 2011

By Steve Li, ASPIRE (Asian Students Promoting Immigrant Rights through Education) Member

In honor of National Coming Out Week: Undocumented and Unafraid we are featuring stories of API dreamers.  The DREAM Act would provide undocumented students that arrived before the age of 16 in the US a pathway to legalization.

It was a sunny morning, and like any other school day, I was in the bathroom getting ready for school when there was a loud knock on the door. I didn’t want to answer it since no one ever comes that early in the morning without notice. So I woke up my mom to see if she was expecting anyone. She said no, but they kept knocking. She got up and went to answer.

That’s when five officials dressed in black rushed in and searched the apartment. I was brushing my teeth when one opened the door and told me to get out and get dressed. I kept asking what was going on, but they wouldn’t tell me anything. Finally one of the officers asked if I knew why they were here and told me that I was undocumented and they would be deporting me back to Peru.

This is the only home I remember; my goals and dreams have always been in the Bay Area. I followed their orders, thinking it was just a mistake and that I would be back at school later that day.

Outside I was searched and handcuffed. My mother was, too. I was separated from my parents, and we were taken to Sacramento and thrown into jail where I was treated like a criminal. I went to bed hungry every night, physically and mentally exhausted.

Every day I woke up thinking that I should be going to school rather than locked up 23 hours a day. I kept asking what was happening, but I couldn’t get anywhere. Immigration officers never came to the jail. The thought of being forced to leave my home and go to a country where I no longer know anyone was devastating. It was mind-boggling, not being able to turn to any one for answers.

After three weeks in Sacramento County Jail, things started to sink in, and the little hope that I had left disappeared. I was flown to Arizona, far away from my family and friends, without being able to contact anyone.

There I spent three days in a room the size of the City College cafeteria with around 200 other people. We slept on the floor in our clothes, and I could smell the sweat and body odor of everyone around me. Some, caught crossing the border, still had mud and dirt on them; others were sick, coughing vigorously. We were packed in tight, only allowed to move to go to the bathroom.

The Detention Center in Arizona, in the middle of nowhere, was surrounded by high fences with razor blades and electrical wires with cameras and security guards everywhere. I told myself this was a nightmare and I would wake up any day now. But days turned into weeks and weeks turned into months.

The stories of others in the facility, from different parts of the world, really touched me. There were many young people like me. I met someone from Guatemala who had come here with his parents when he was very young. He had no say in immigrating and was just finishing high school when Immigration and Customs Enforcement took him into custody in Los Angeles. Now he, too, expected to be sent back to a country he had no memory of.

I was lucky to be living in the Bay Area and have my community organize to bring me home, eventually convincing Senator Feinstein to introduce a private bill to stop my deportation. But there are many DREAMers who are still incarcerated in Arizona and elsewhere. We want a chance to pursue our education, a chance to use our degrees, a chance to give back to the communities we grew up in and love.

This is not a Hispanic or an Asian issue. This is an issue that affects all of us. This will happen to more and more students, friends, and neighbors. We have a broken immigration system, and we need to fix it. I don’t want other students to go through what I went through. This is why is so important to pass the Federal DREAM Act. I’m Undocumented and unafraid.


Liberty and Justice for All, Except for Immigrants

March 8, 2010

By: Christopher Punongbayan

In the last week, the cases of two immigrant families surfaced in the mainstream media and highlighted the ways our federal immigration system is failing our country.  In New York City, the New York Times covered the story of Qing Wu, a young Chinese American man who committed an offense from which he has completely turned his life around.  His reward? Deportation. Read the rest of this entry »


Forcible Collection of DNA: Ill-advised & Beyond the Law

April 2, 2009

t_roethkeBy Theodore Roethke

In December 2008, the U.S. Department of Justice released regulations to implement a law, the DNA Fingerprint Act of 2005 passed by Congress in 2005. The next day, the Asian Law Caucus issued Read the rest of this entry »


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