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Illegal immigrants: God's gift to America: Is Catching U.S. Citizenship Something Like Catching The Flu?
28 March 2011 By Jane Stillwater
You see them all over America, standing in front of
big-box hardware stores looking for work or selling
oranges on the corner or doing our dishes in the
kitchens of fancy restaurants or fixing our roofs or
making our beds or raising our children.
Thank God for illegal immigrants!
"But Jane," you might say, "those people are stealing
our jobs!" Yeah right. Jobs we don't want. We're
talking about diligent workers who are more than
willing to perform the sh*t-work jobs that nobody else
wants at a pay rate that no one else in America would
ever consider accepting.
I'm currently reading Soledad O'Brien's new book, "The
Next Big Story," wherein she states that while
researching her documentary on Latinos in America, she
asked a fairly broad sample of "legal" Americans if
they had ever lost their job to an Illegal immigrant.
O'Brien then goes on to say that she had been unable
to find even one person who had lost their job to a
Latino. Not even one. But I digress.
What I really want to discuss here is not what illegal
immigrants take away from Americans but rather what it
is that they ADD to the American experience.
We are not only blessed but also downright lucky to
have these people living and working here -- no matter
how many exaggerated negative stereotypes Lou Dobbs
has dreamed up.
The main ingredient that "illegal" immigrants continue
to bring to our American table is one of the most
valuable assets that this country has. When illegal
immigrants cross that southern border, they bring hope
along with them. And hope is more than just some
political snake oil sold to us during the last
presidential election. Hope is the stuff from which we
build our future -- and America's "illegal" immigrants
add this one chip to the pot that America so sorely
wants and needs right now in these current war-torn
and depressive times.
"Illegal" immigrants bring hope with them now, just
like 'illegal" immigrants always have -- in the back
of their covered wagons, stuffed into their cardboard
suitcases and knapsacks and sewed into the hems of
their skirts.
I myself am a direct descendant of one of the first
waves of "illegal" immigrants that first brought hope
to America's shores -- the original native Americans
who arrived here over 10,000 years ago. And they
arrived here illegally, trudging stolidly across the
frozen land-bridge that is now the Bering Strait. And
these immigrants brought with them two of the greatest
sources of hope that we have -- democracy and respect
for the land.
My great-great-great-grandfather, Chief Ballard,
"illegally" immigrated to the Oklahoma territory --
after surviving a horrific Trail of Tears.
My great-grandmother, Mary Ballard, married the deputy
US marshal at Tahlequah, the one who brought in the
outlaw Frank James (Frank's brother Jesse busted him
out of jail the next day but it's the thought that
counts. My grandmother, Alta Purpus, remembered Frank
being handcuffed to her parents' brass bedstead
overnight when she was a girl).
I am also a direct descendant of another wave of
"illegal" immigrants -- the Puritans who founded
Massachusetts and Thomas Hooker who founded
Connecticut and James Hooker who fought in the
American Revolution. I think there is also a Tudor
family connection back in there somewhere so perhaps
all my daughters and granddaughters actually really
ARE princesses!
Through the Thompson side of my family, I am related
to the next wave of "illegal" immigrants to come over
here -- African slaves who built the American South
with their own hands.
I am also a direct descendant or am tied by marriage
or blood to many of America's 19th-century "illegal"
immigrant groups, the Eastern Europeans (through my
favorite great-aunt Dixie Cohen), Danes (my
grandmother married a Janssen), Germans (my
great-great-grandfather was a Purpus, used to be a
forester in Bavaria, had a son who was hung as a horse
thief in Missouri), Chinese (the Jo family first
arrived in California in 1849 and have been here ever
since. Mena Jo Stillwater is a sixth-generation
Californian. There aren't many other "legal"
Californians who can claim that -- unless they are
Mexican!), and Mexicans too (yep, I've got them in my
family tree as well -- the Lozano and Hernandez
families). But I digress. Again.
"So what's your point here, Jane?" My point is this.
All of us Americans used to be "illegals" at one time
-- or are descended from illegals. And thank God for
that!
And America's latest generation of illegals, like all
the other generations before them, brings with it a
new sense of renewal -- and of hope.
So enough of this "illegal" crap!
PS: Soledad O'Brien also stated that Mexican-Americans
and Mexican immigrants [and also Muslim immigrants and
Muslim-Americans too, as far as I can tell] have now
taken the place formerly held by African-Americans --
as America's most hated, despised and segregated race.
And she's right. That's just pathetic.
All too many Latinos here [and Muslims too] have been
spit upon, not allowed to attend schools, denied the
right to buy homes and even lynched -- just like in
the bad old days of the Klu Klux Klan and Bull Connor.
I marched in Montgomery with Dr. King for nothing? It
looks like I did.
Someone -- perhaps a Latina Rosa Parks? -- ought to
organize a bus boycott here until things change and
our newer immigrants, immigrants just like your
fathers, get more respect. Or perhaps we can hold a
one-day general strike where every Latino [and Muslim]
in America refuses to go to work. If that were to
happen, America would come to a screeching halt, wanna
bet?
Plus it's time for Americans to grow up and stop all
this hatin'. Nothing good has ever come from hate. It
eats at our souls.
PPS: Where does it say anywhere in our Constitution
that it is legal to have an INS? Did George Washington
have an INS? Were INS agents there to meet the slave
ships in Charleston? What about the Scots who came
here after Culladen? Were they met by the INS too? And
were INS agents hovering around in Alaska when our
first Eskimo ancestors finally made it across the
Bering Strait? I think not.
PPPS: And where did this whole concept of
"citizenship" come from anyway? When did citizen
requirements ever become "legal"? But if I actually am
a "legal" citizen of the United States, then why can't
I just appoint others to citizenship as well? Sort of
like "Each one teach one" or like spreading a virus
around?
Is catching U.S. citizenship
something like catching the flu?
But if you are a so-called "illegal" immigrant in
America and you are reading this now, then by the
power vested in me as a United States citizen and with
the love and mercy of God -- who has freely given
America a whole tide of hopeful "illegal" immigrants
all down through the centuries as His (or Her) own
great gift to us -- then I hereby declare and affirm
that you too are hereby made LEGAL as well.
Sorry that I don't have any fancy certificates made up
for this occasion -- but if any of you new American
hopefuls happen to have designed one of your own, I
will officially present it to you with great ceremony
-- and even give you a big hug. Welcome to America!
Amen! Achoo.
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EsinIslam.Com
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