The ICE panel discussion was led by a member of AMOR
(Alliance to mobilize our resistance), a coalition of six organizations, along
with a member of PRSM (pronounced “prism;” Providence Youth Student Movement),
one of the coalition members.
AMOR takes inspiration from activist groups in the past, The
Black Panther Party and The Young Lords, a Puerto Rican activist group in
Chicago & New York, particularly from their community service
programs. They provide support line services
to connect people to transportation, mental health providers, interpretation
services, community response organizations, and legal support services
involving either immigration or police violence issues. AMOR also organizes rallies, letter writing
campaigns, and other events to publicize and resolve immigrant detention and
family separation crises. In addition,
AMOR lobbies for legislation to prevent immigrant detention and family
separation.
PRMS (Providence Youth Student Movement) works to support
Cambodian deportees who have been deported to Cambodia through the 2002
Repatriation Agreement. PRSM lobbies to
suspend the repatriation agreement, reports the deportations as human rights
violations to the U.N. and calls for the return of immigrants deported to
Cambodia.
We learned at this forum that even immigrants with permanent
resident status are being detained or deported for minor legal violations from
many years ago. I teach adult immigrants
and refugees at Dorcas International Institute of RI. Members of this community may be subjected to
the aggressive detainment and deportation policies of ICE and the current U.S.
administration. No immigrants are safe. My friend and student A------- just received
her permanent resident card, along with her family. She is so happy. But the danger still exists that some legal
technicality will put her or her family members at risk for deportation. I haven’t seen any outward anxiety from the
students at Dorcas, but many of them already suffer trauma and related medical problems
from their experiences in war torn or politically unstable countries. If detainment and deportation processes should
be initiated, I hope that AMOR would step in and protest, bringing attention from
the public. I should make sure that AMOR’s
24-hour service line is posted at Dorcas.
I met an inmate of Cambodian descent at the state prison where I began
volunteering last week. He is native
born American, but if his father or older relatives who were born in Cambodia
were incarcerated, they might be subjected to the 2002 Repatriation Agreement
and sent back to a country where a quarter of the population had been massacred,
a country and nightmare they had previously escaped.
I am not aware of much that the organization Dorcas does to
respond to the dangers that face our students.
I do remember the posting and handing out of cards that spell out an
immigrants’ rights and the cards give suggestions for how to behave if ICE
detains or arrests someone. What should
teachers do to acknowledge the fears and anxieties the students may be
experiencing? If the classroom environment
has been established as a safe, welcoming community, then students will feel
free to express their concerns in safety.
Making the student feel part of the classroom community is an essential goal
for teachers of all English language learners and now even more critical. When students express concern, teachers can address
those concerns with assurances that we, our schools, and other organizations
will provide support. We should make
sure they have access to legal assistance.
Our schools that serve immigrant communities should have resource
listings readily available and in multiple languages. The teachers and staff at Dorcas are not
allowed to question, inquire, or speculate about a student’s immigration
status. We respect the privacy of our students.
All students have equal status in our school regardless of their
immigration/documentation status.
During the forum’s Q & A session, a teacher attending
suggested that schools and teachers can help counter today’s political climate
of anti-immigrant sentiment by including into the curriculum the history of
immigrants in this country and their contributions. Let all generations learn
inclusivity, appreciation, and respect for our immigrant neighbors and
friends. Hopefully the children of
tomorrow won’t turn on each other if we educate them now to be tolerate and
compassionate, if we teach them how integral to the fabric of American society,
our immigrant residents are.
I believe that providing moral and practical support,
including access to resources is the short-term responsibility we have to our
students. Delivering a curriculum that
includes and values immigrant contributions to the U.S. is our long-term responsibility
to our students.