Weeping

My grandmother was a young teenager  in 1911 when she sailed, alone, past the Statue of Liberty into New York harbor. She was fleeing her homeland at her mother’s insistence: her father had been murdered in his bed, in front of his family, by an angry mob — murdering Jews was a frequent public sport in eastern Europe, as lynching African-Americans was in the southern U.S. My grandmother’s mother feared for my grandmother’s safety: she was the oldest child, she was in the public eye because she was a Jew attending the local Christian girls school.


My granny made her long slow way from Vilna in Lithuania to Hamburg, where she found passage, steerage, in a ship bound for New York. And when she sailed past the Statue, she knew she was safe, that whatever trials lay ahead, no one would try to murder her for her religion.


The obscenity perpetrated on January 28 by the current U.S. regime puts the lie to my granny’s sense of security. This sense had already been challenged in the 1930’s, when the U.S. denied entry to her mother and sisters: they were murdered, down to the smallest infant. On January 28, her refuge was completely dismantled.


The current White House incumbent, having no sense either of law or history, has separated families of people whose lives were in danger in their home countries. He has made a travesty of American ideals of justice and liberty. I spent a good part of this morning weeping for the murder of my country’s ideals, but it is afternoon and I am trying to act.


It is hard to get a green card. To do so, you must 1) Be in the U.S. legally, either on a student visa or, quite rarely, a work visa. If you are here illegally, either because you outstayed your tourist visa, or because you came in undocumented, you will never be eligible for a green card. 2) You must be here for some number of years. 3) You must have a sponsor 4) You are vetted by Immigration and Customs


For refugee status, the bar is even higher.


Yet the regime is turning away green cardholders and refugees, causing pain, chaos and great fear.


The upshot is likely to be an increase in terrorism, not a reduction, and this is quite likely what the regime wants — the more fear they can sow in the U.S., the more the citizens will acquiesce in their extreme actions.


In the meantime, while the Statue and I and millions like me weep, Canada is welcoming all U.S. green cardholders. I am grateful to the Canadians, but I am deeply ashamed.


Here at home, the ACLU and the American Immigration Lawyers Association stepped up to provide pro bono legal support to people who had been detained by Homeland Security at airports around the country. If  you have any money to give, please provide support to these organizations as they try to keep us a country of laws and justice.


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Published on January 29, 2017 10:22
Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)    post a comment »
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message 1: by Mkotch (new)

Mkotch Thank you for expressing my feelings so well - as always.


message 2: by Susan (new)

Susan Weeping with you!


message 3: by Karen (new)

Karen Jones my grandmother made the journey to american in 1898 at the age of 16, much to my wonder and amazement. going forward to what is currently happening with the regime in power, i am unable to grasp any reasoning in their plans. i agree that if you can donate, now is the time to donate to the aclu or american immigration lawyers association.

thank you, sara, for your heartfelt and meaningful words, so very well stated.

k


message 4: by Meg (new)

Meg Thank you for sharing this. I am on the verge of weeping, actually weeping, or wanting to put my fist through a wall EVERY SINGLE DAY.


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