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Immigrant rights event draws big crowd
By
Minnie Bruce Pratt
Syracuse, N.Y.
Published May 28, 2009 9:14 PM
“Immigrant,” a bilingual community event on immigrant rights in
Syracuse, held in the Blodgett High School cafeteria, drew a
standing-room-only, multinational crowd of more than 110 people on May 14. Some
participants traveled from as far as Buffalo, Rochester, Binghamton and
Manhattan. La Casita Cultural Center Project organized the event, in
collaboration with the Detention Task Force and the May 1st Coalition for
Worker and Immigrant Rights/International Migrants Alliance.
From left, Luz Incarnación, José Peréz, Caroline Kim, Teresa
Gutierrez, Aly Wane.
WW photo: Leslie Feinberg
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The event lasted several hours—from tapas to dinner to music. All remarks
were translated into both Spanish and English. The program included panels,
which gave voice to struggling undocumented workers, and round tables on the
roots of migration and immigrant rights. Lead organizer for La Casita,
Immaculada Lara-Bonilla declared: “The event succeeded in meeting our goals—to share
stories of migration, illegal arrests and racial profiling; to provide information about legal rights
for immigrants; to bring together different advocacy groups and the local
Latino/a community and strengthen existing support networks; and to celebrate culture as
a form of empowerment, including awareness about immigrant people’s
cultural rights.”
Alison Mountz, an organizer with the DTF, said: “This event provided an
opportunity for members of the DTF to meet and work in solidarity with groups
across New York state. Hundreds of people have been arrested at workplaces
across central New York and at the Syracuse train and bus station, as they have
downstate. Often the families of those arrested on buses and trains live
elsewhere, so we have been building a network to help families locate loved
ones who disappear into the system.”
The DTF has been holding moving pickets and handing out leaflets at the
Regional Transportation Center in Syracuse to protest the detentions by U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Immigrant workers are also now being
arrested by ICE at construction sites in the area, including the Carousel
Mall.
Spontaneous applause greeted the remarks of Teresa Gutierrez, of the May 1st
Coalition and the International Migrants Alliance, when she said: “I
didn’t cross the border. The border crossed me.” Gutierrez, a
Tejana, referred to the imperialist seizure by the U.S. of portions of Mexico
in 1848, including what is now the state of Texas.
She pointed out that as corporations move throughout the world to make profits
by exploiting workers, immigrants should certainly have a right to move
wherever they need to. In response to a question from Gutierrez, a majority of
those in the room raised a hand to indicate they were born in the U.S.
Gutierrez emphasized that their solidarity was crucial to stopping the crises
of racist profiling, check points and prison detention of immigrants.
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