It is Jews' Duty to "protect immigration rights"
- From: "Heinrich" <Heinrich@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 09:09:25 +0200
By Rachel Biale, Bay Area regional director of Progressive Jewish Alliance
I am an immigrant. My parents were illegal immigrants. My ancestors were
perennial immigrants. Through good fortune, I came legally to this country.
But my parents, escaping the Nazis, were caught off the coast of Haifa by
the British and deported as illegal immigrants.
Most readers of this column are the children, grandchildren or
great-grandchildren of immigrants. As a community, our position on the
current debate on immigration must be informed by this legacy.
As we remembered again at Passover, the Bible is quintessentially a tale of
migrations. Our national identity is forged in "out of" and "into"
experiences, from Abraham's immigration to Canaan, and Jacob's sons' journey
to Egypt, to the Exodus and re-immigration to the land of Israel and the
forced emigrations into exile.
Out of the crucible of immigration comes one of the most powerful and often
repeated ethical teachings of the Torah: "You shall not oppress the
stranger. You should understand the heart of the stranger since you were
strangers in the land of Egypt" (Exodus 23:9).
In addressing the current immigration-related swelling of public protest and
Washington partisanship, we must begin with this empathy for the stranger
and oppose any legislation that will criminalize immigrants and the citizens
who give them basic humanitarian aid.
The Sensenbrenner Bill (HR 4437) would do just that, along with many other
provisions that threaten to turn our country into a monstrous police state.
How else can we envision deporting more than 11 million people, most of whom
came to this country for the very reasons we and our ancestors did: to build
a better life for our children?
The now-dead Kennedy-McCain Bill (which may be revived now that Congress is
back in session) is flawed in many ways but may be the most we can hope for
in the current panic over illegal immigration (one wonders how much of this
sudden urgency serves as a distraction from the catastrophe of the war in
Iraq.)
In considering the immigration initiatives, two related issues should be
made more explicit: enforcement through identification/surveillance and
economic justice.
The proposals to criminalize, pursue and prosecute illegal immigrants go
hand-in-hand with the Real ID Act passed by Congress last May, a measure
little known to the general public. This law requires all states to
electronically encode personal identification information in all driver
licenses. It will make the driver license a mandatory national ID card that
will become a tool in scanning the population for "unwanteds," illegal
immigrants first and foremost (more information is available on this at the
ACLU's site: www.realnightmare.org).
As for economic justice, the issue is complex. In the long run, illegal
immigrant workers promote economic growth, though in the short term they
might place a burden on social, medical and educational services. Over time,
they infuse the labor force with a larger pool of younger workers and, given
their larger families, enlarge the size of the next generation. Many also
pay into the Social Security system but never collect benefits.
This economic growth comes, however, at a price that is often neglected: low
wages that depress incomes throughout the low-wage labor market. Immigrant
labor, legal and illegal, must be seen in the context of globalization and
outsourcing. We generally ship raw materials and machinery for industrial
production to countries where labor is cheap. When we can't - in
agriculture, construction, food services, tending our gardens and raising
our kids - we reverse the direction and bring cheap labor here instead of
sending the work abroad.
Labor standards codified in law should, but frequently do not, protect
illegal immigrant workers. The threat of deportation makes illegal workers
extremely vulnerable to low wages and exploitive work conditions.
Thus, should a "guest worker" provision be included in immigration reform
(problematic in its own right as it would create a vulnerable underclass),
these workers cannot be left solely dependent on their employers (as is the
case in the Kennedy-McCain Bill). The program must include provisions for
workers' protection through legislation, oversight bodies, and the right to
organize.
As we debate the complex issue of immigration, we must remember the
commandment to "understand the heart of the stranger."
Media Link
http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/29046/format/html/displaystory.html
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