Texas memorial for immigrants
By
Gloria Rubac
Victoria, Texas
Published May 19, 2005 11:00 PM
Two years ago, on May
14, 2003, 19 immigrants died from dehydration, hypothermia and suffocation in
the back of a tractor-trailer carrying more than 70 people from Harlingen,
Texas—near the Mexico border—en route to Houston. This year on May
14, some 75 people caravaned from Houston to Victoria to remember and honor them
and to demand immigration reform.
Alma Diaz speaking. Right, Martha Olvera, Serafin Olvera Justice committee.
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Families of those who died and
immigrant rights activists gathered early at the office of the Salvadoran
organization CRECEN. They painted slogans in English and Spanish on their cars
with white shoe polish that read, “Justice for immigrants,”
“No more immigrant deaths” and “Stop the border
violence!”
The car caravan was seen by many as it left Houston,
winding its way through the Latino community onto U.S. Highway 59 for the
120-mile trip.
Television network Univisión, El Día—
Houston’s daily Spanish-language newspaper—and other media joined in
the caravan.
After the caravan arrived in Victoria, family members and
activists created a memorial on the ground with tall jars of candles, one for
each of those who died, each holding the flag of their homeland: Mexico, El
Salvador, Honduras and the Dominican Republic.
At the rally, organizer
Martha Olvera introduced representatives of several of the families who had lost
loved ones in the tragedy. They spoke quietly and humbly, remembering their
husbands, fathers and brothers.
“My son Jorge died right here. He
was only 15 years old,” said Dora Torres, speaking softly in Spanish. She
had come to Texas from New York to bring fresh flowers to the spot where the
teenager died. Torres, who is originally from El Salvador, also came to last
year’s memorial.
Activist Cristobal Hinojosa, with Mexicanos en
Acción, told the crowd that these deaths should not be blamed on Tyrone
Williams, the driver of the truck, but on the U.S. government, which denies most
Mexicanos legal entry.
Williams was tried and convicted last month in
federal court in Houston. Pro secutors were seeking the death penalty but the
jury deadlocked during the sentencing. The U.S. Attorney General has announced
plans to re-try Williams and again ask for the death penalty.
Another
rally speaker, María Jiménez—a member of the board of
directors of the National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights—urged
people to press Congress to pass a comprehensive immigration reform package.
Other speakers included the consul general of Mexico, Carlos
Gonzáles; Alma Díaz, of Latinos Por La Paz; and Angela
Mejía, a member of LACLA, the Latin American Council for Labor Advance
ment, and the Harris County AFL-CIO.
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