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Crossing the Mediterranean, Crossing Mexico.

Below is a personal post from our Northern California Director Rev. Deborah Lee. Rev Lee shares with us an account of her experience on our Root Causes Pilgrimage to Honduras and Guatemala and the parallels of the migration journey between crossing the Mediterranean and crossing Mexico. For other personal accounts of experience please visit out blog at: RootCausesDelegation.wordpress.com

The world has been touched by the image of little Aylan Kurdi, the Syrian toddler whose body washed ashore the Mediterranean Sea this week as his family attempted to reach Greece. His mother and 5 year old brother also drowned, adding to the more than 2600 migrants who have died out of 300,000 who have attempted to cross by sea to get to Europe this year.

A completely preventable death if migrants were allowed safe passage so they wouldn’t have to come such dangerous ways. After all, the thousands of dollars migrants pay smugglers is many more times the cost of a one-way plane ticket. Aylan’s family was hoping to eventually get to an aunt in Canada who could offer protection and safety from the bombs barraging their village.

I recently returned from Honduras and Guatemala where we met people like Aylan’s father, family members who have lost loved ones due to unsympathetic and restrictive immigration and asylum laws.

disaparacidos-300x225We met Honduran mothers whose children have tragically died on the migrant trail heading for the United States. Even worse for some who have been waiting years, they are not even sure what fate has befallen them and so count them among los disaparecidos/las disaparacidas (the disappeared).

“Mexico takes our children. Like the Mediterranean Sea takes other children,” they told us.

700 cases from Honduras alone. The mothers all can recite the exact date their children left, the last time they heard their voices en route on the phone. They have photographs of each one. All young faces, in their teens and twenties. Some left with toddlers, like Aylan, in their arms.

Many also were potential asylum seekers fleeing violence seeking a lifeline in another place, another country. Others seeking a way to make a living to contribute to and support their families. Killed either in Mexico by organized crime, migration authorities or security forces that prey upon migrants; or dying of thirst crossing the Sonoran desert trying to avoid US Border Patrol.

Also preventable deaths.

Immigration doesn’t have to be difficult if we allowed safe passage and had immigration laws that put human life at its center.

Perhaps, looking at the crisis in Europe, we have become desensitized to the image of migrants dying crossing our own southern border. We might forget the avertable deaths of migrants that take place closer to home because of US immigration laws.

And why not? We are seeing less of it, because Mexico is doing our proxy immigration enforcement. To the tune of $86 billion dollars a year, the US is paying the Mexican government to crack down hard on migrants coming through Mexico, conduct mass detentions and deportations, set up more road blocks and even build 12 permanent naval bases to prevent migrants from getting even close to our US borders. All reliant on Mexican security forces with a track record of abuses, disappearances and impunity.

We are making migration even more dangerous and more expensive for those who see no options for their human survival. As the US and Mexico have shut down the land route through Mexico, some may already have to start coming via maritime routes along the Pacific.

It won’t be long before we too might tragically find a toddler washed up on our shores.

-Rev. Deborah Lee

**Nearly 50 years ago, in 1966, my mother fled her country of birth, Indonesia, at the beginning of massacres and a genocide that left between 1-3 million people dead. She went to a lifeline, an uncle in Ohio who could offer some temporary safety and protection. How many of our families have a similar story in our history? Who among us wouldn’t do the same, if we could muster the courage and resourcefulness to flee for safety?

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Mandela’s South Africa: Race, Politics and Immigration Now in America

In commemoration of the 25th Anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s Release from Prison, our organization held a conversation on Race, Politics and Immigration with four native South Africans who now live in America. They discussed their experiences both in their home country and the United States.
While, we live in a time were Race and Immigration are at the forefront of many conversations it is important that we reflect on the teachings, learning and legacy of President Mandela. In hopes that we may bring with us ideas and strategy to achieve justice.

We had the honor to present these amazing individuals: Mr. Clive Hoffman, a Jew, Professor Movindri Reddy, an Indian, Pastor Kelvin Sauls, a Black, and Pastor Rudolph van Graan, an Afrikaner. The panel discussion was moderated by the Rev. Dan Romero, an immigration attorney and former Conference Minister of the Southern California Nevada Conference of the United Church of Christ.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uY8CciGcgPs]

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Powerful Testimony from Refugee Family at Saturday Vigil

This past Saturday we held our monthly vigil at the West County Detention Facility to stand in solidarity with immigrant families and detainees.

This vigil was led by St. John’s Presbyterian of Berkeley, a sanctuary congregation who has helped many immigrant families seeking asylum from violence in Central America.

One of these family members joined the vigil and shared their horrifying testimony of how they had escaped violence in their country after some members of their family had been killed and raped by gang members.

They also shared with us the great news that they won their asylum case!

Unfortunately, two members of their family were not so lucky. They received the news that two of their family members were crossing the border, and one family member, the husband, was caught and held in detention in Arizona. The family, thanks to the Rocket Docket of expedited deportation, has 30 days to come up with a lawyer and mount a case to stop his deportation.

What’s worse, the son, who has crossing the border with his father, had gone missing in the dessert for 6 days! We prayed for his protection during the vigil, and right after the prayer, the family received a call from him saying that he was in a small town heavily surveyed by ICE and Border Patrol! But the story doesn’t end there.

Thanks to the help of some human rights organization in the town, the son was able to flee Arizona and is finally reunited with his family in Oakland!

We grieve and rejoice with these immigrant families, and we hold their stories as sacred and engrave them into the heart of our nation’s history of immigration. Their story now belongs to the countless others that have built the narrative of this nation, and we welcome them as true and beautiful members of our American family.

Fred Goff from St. John shared why they decided to help this family: “We started accompanying this family one year ago and wondered what can we do, and we realized that we can do a lot. We learned about the family’s story; helped them find a lawyer and negotiated with the lawyer, helped them pay for an expert witness in their case, which was crucial. I have learned that this is also a spiritual journey. It is about learning how to trust and do the right thing. With God at your side, you can move mountains.”

We leave you with some beautiful photos of the vigil from David Bacon: