FALLS CHURCH NEWS-PRESS | FCNP.COM
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SEPTEMBER 14 - 20, 2017 | PAGE 25
Possible Termination of DACA Amnesty Program Causes Community to Rally, Reorganize for Rights of DREAMers by Orrin Konheim
Falls Church News-Press
In the basement of the Winter Hill apartments where nonprofit Court Appointed Special Advocacy de Virginia holds community meetings, staff member Eduardo Zelaya calls out of the audience 30-year-old Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, known as DACA, recipient Ermanda Dean and asks her to engage in a mock verbal tug of war with three people acting as representatives of the Trump administration. He then asks if anyone who knows a DREAMer to join the tug-of-war team, and he finally asks anyone for whom the issue is important to join. âY aqui estamos and no vamos!â one participant shouts as the rest of the crowd cheers. For Court Appointed Special Advocacy, or CASA, this meeting isnât just about a team-building exercise teaching strength in numbers. Itâs an expression of communal support for those like Dean whose status is now in limbo because of the Trump administrationâs recent decision to rescind former President Obamaâs executively administered DACA amnesty program, tasking Congress to find a way to legislatively acknowledge it within six months time. âSomeone might ask why I am going to that meeting if I have no hopes of legalizing my status,â CASA Advocacy and Political Specialist Jorge Mendez tells the crowd. âBut at the local level, we have a strategy that we have to protect them. We have to define how weâre going to go to the sheriffs, the cities and the police force.â Jennifer Romero and her brother, Angel, came to the U.S. 17 years ago when they were 4 and 2, respectively, and hardly have any memories of the country of their birth. Like many at the meeting, they only found out about their status when DACA was created in 2012. Others like Dean knew about her status but werenât legally brought out of the shadows until DACA was created. Since then, these people have been able to get driverâs licenses, work jobs and get admitted to college. Jennifer and Angel both have been accepted to four-year colleges and were in the process of working from home to afford tuition first. âThis is not the time to cry. This is the time to take action,â
SIMULATING the strength of the communityâs support for DACA (left) versus the Trump Administrationâs will to rescind it (right) was this group during a CASA meeting at the Winter Hill Apartments. (Photo: Orrin Konheim) Romero said to the group. In an office near Baileyâs Crossroads, Immigrant Advocacy Program director Simon SandovalMoshenberg of the Legal Aid Justice Center has been flooded with calls from former clients, many whom are in college or graduates in the workforce. All are worried about how DACAâs possible termination will change things for them. âItâs what this population symbolizes,â said SandovalMoshenberg, âThese are the shining stars of the immigrant community. For many families, these people represent the success story of the family.â An aura of uncertainty pervaded his conversations in prior weeks. A week before Trumpâs announcement, he had to advise a DACA student against embarking on a study abroad program she already paid for because he couldnât assure her sheâd be let back into the country. Now that the announcement has passed, heâs faced with a new set of challenges. âItâs the difference of knowing whether youâre going to get executed or knowing the date of the execution,â Sandoval-Moshenberg
said. âI donât know which would let someone sleep more or less soundly but people who have had legal status for five years are now facing the likelihood that, unless something changes, theyâre gonna lose the legal status theyâve built for themselves.â In the short-term, SandovalMoshenberg is focused on the relatively small subset of people (estimated at 2,750 in Virginia) who are eligible to renew their permits for two-year stays if they can meet an October 5 application deadline. A large part of the battle is assuring people of support who would otherwise be afraid to seek help. Leobardo Eslava, who attended the CASA meeting at Winter Hill, said that when he tries to explain to others to meet and mobilize, a lot of people are hesitant to leave their homes. âWe have to work on our communityâs self-esteem to make sure we know we can make a change,â said Mendez during the CASA meeting. âAre we not going to be able to take our kids to school, are we not going to go to hospitals, are we not going to work? Are we gonna keep hiding in houses? Either way, weâll be captured.â
At the CASA meeting and in his advocacy, Mendezâs strategy doesnât just involve advocating for short-term and expansive change at the local level but a codified separation between law enforcement and immigration law, even while mobilizing locally. Another major community asset, the Catholic Church has taken a rare political stance. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a statement calling the administrationâs actions âa heartbreaking moment in our history that shows the absence of mercy and good willâ and pledged support to finding an âexpeditious means of protection for DACA youth.â Father Matthew Zuberbueler at St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in Falls Church said that his sermons arenât ordinarily political. However, because the issue is in the forefront of congregation members minds, he is considering bringing it up by encouraging people to make their voices heard through reasonable means. âOne of the things I find is that when people meet people, itâs no longer a political issue. Our parish is so diverse, so Iâve seen a lot of our congregation who arenât
Hispanic. They have a heart for people, people who arenât safe to be able to work and accomplish what they want in their lives,â Zuberbueler said. Though the future is uncertain, some DACA recipients hope a better solution might emerge because they know firsthand that DACA was insufficient. âI never wanted to be a DREAMer,â said CASA staff member and DACA recipient Luis Aguilar whose father was deported. âBy calling myself a DREAMer, it separated me from my family. Because Iâm a young person and people are more sympathetic to my story, [that] doesnât mean that I want it. What I care about is immigration reform.â In in the interim, local advocates like CASA, the Legal and Justice Center and multiple people are ready to do whatever they can. âIâm not in the business of predicting what Congress will or wonât do. My crystal ball is no better than anyone elseâs, but what I will say is weâre not gonna go wait on our hands and knees. Weâre going to try to do everything to influence the decision,â said Sandoval-Moshenberg.