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Immigrants' Rights Drive Starts
The New York Times ^ | September 25, 2003 | STEVEN GREENHOUSE

Posted on 09/25/2003 1:45:50 PM PDT by sarcasm

TUCSON, Sept. 24 — Ninety immigrants and supporters left their buses and marched outside the Roman Catholic cathedral here today, carrying foot-high crosses to commemorate people from south of the border who died in the desert as they sought a better life in the United States.

At St. Augustine Cathedral, the immigrants were greeted by more than 400 parishioners, students and others who marched alongside them and joined in singing, "We Shall Overcome."

Outside the cathedral a woman carried a large sign that said "How Many Must Die: Arizona Deaths This Year 146. Change Our Border Policy."

The ceremony was part of an elaborate spectacle, the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride, in which 18 buses carrying hundreds of immigrants are stopping in more than 100 cities to promote immigrants' rights. Inspired by the 1961 freedom rides that sought to integrate buses in the South, the new ride aims to turn immigrants' rights into a new civil rights movement.

"Then, as now, let the freedom buses roll," the Rev. John M. Fife, pastor of the Southside Presbyterian Church, said in the eucharistic celebration at the cathedral. "Then, as now, vigilantes terrorized and discriminated with guns. Then, as now, there is a moral and ethical issue that must unite church and synagogue and mosque and labor and civil rights and mainstream America in a movement to change the course of history."

As they visit Tucson, Las Vegas, Dallas, Detroit and other cities, the riders are saying the United States needs a more humane immigration policy, one that makes it easier to reunite families, that stops immigrants from dying in the desert, that prevents employers from preying on long-time workers who do not have legal documents.

The riders hope for nothing less than to move immigrant rights, especially gaining legal status for more than eight million illegal immigrants, to the forefront of legislative and political debates. Leaving from 10 cities, the riders are scheduled to converge on Oct. 1 in Washington to lobby Congress and proceed to Flushing Meadows, Queens, for a giant demonstration on Oct. 4.

"The idea of legalization is very important," said Angélica Soto, a farm worker from Mexico on a bus from Los Angeles. "Legalization is important to stop employers from exploiting workers. It's important to help reunite families. I have a friend who couldn't go to his mother's funeral back in Mexico, because he was worried he'd never be allowed back into the United States."

The two buses that arrived here today left Los Angeles on Tuesday morning after a huge good-bye party. They stopped in Palm Springs, Calif., for a rally and proceeded to Phoenix for a demonstration at the State Capitol where priests, politicians, African-American leaders and union presidents spoke. The buses carry immigrants, some legal and some illegal, from China, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Mexico, the Philippines and other countries.

In the rally in Palm Springs, more than 300 immigrants, parishioners and union members joined the bus riders at Our Lady of Solitude Church. The signs said "Immigrants are today's slaves" and "I cut your grass, I make your bed, I wash your dishes, I pick your fruit. I refuse to be invisible."

The Rev. Miguel Ceja, a graduate of Stanford University who entered the United States illegally from Mexico at 14 to work on farms, presided over the ceremony as he strummed a guitar.

In a skit that students from Coachella Valley High School performed, Steve Aquino, a senior, said: "I work for minimum wage to put food on your table. But you don't know if I have food on mine."

Mr. Aquino, whose father is a landscaper, said he wished the ride had occurred years ago.

"I'm so glad they're here," he said after the skit. "Immigrants work so hard. Too many immigrants don't get paid right for what they do."

The organizers said they hoped the effort focused President Bush and Congress on expanding immigrants' rights because the issue dropped off the public radar after the Sept. 11 attacks. Before then, the push to reform immigration laws was receiving a serious hearing from Mr. Bush and Congress as President Vicente Fox of Mexico and many immigrant groups pushed the issue.

"Our message of changing immigration laws is a message to Democrats and Republicans as they try to attract Latino voters," the chairwoman of the ride, Maria Elena Durazo, said. "There is hardly a Latino family who doesn't currently or didn't very recently have a family member who was undocumented."

The Congressional Black Caucus, the N.A.A.C.P., the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists and other African-American groups back the ride. Not only do those groups see it as a valuable tribute to the 1960's freedom rides and civil rights movement, but they also recognize that the push for immigrants' rights will help immigrants from Africa and the Caribbean.

The main sponsors are immigrant advocacy groups and unions. In urging union leaders and members to rally around the riders, labor is seeking to increase its visibility among the fast growing immigrant population and to convince immigrants that unions can improve their economic lot.

The groups have asked powerful and visible friends, including clergy members of Congress and state senators, to appear with them.

"The vast majority of these people are working, and many of them face unscrupulous employers who take advantage of them," said Antonio Villaraigosa, a Los Angeles City Council member and former mayoral candidate. "We need a humane, sensible immigration policy that takes into account that these people have worked here for years, they pay taxes, their children are living here."

Anti-immigrant groups have denounced the ride, heckled the rallies and sent threatening e-mail messages.

"There's something almost Orwellian for people violating the laws of the country to go en masse to Congress to demand their rights under the law," said Ira Mehlman, a spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration Reform in Washington.

The riders want Congress to approve an amnesty for illegal immigrants like the one enacted in 1986. The demonstrators also want stronger protections for immigrant workers, additional visas to reunite families and fewer violations of immigrants' civil liberties.

"I think the people in the United States are fair minded," said Dolores Huerta, a rider who founded the United Farm Workers with Cesar Chavez. "When you have people who are being oppressed, who are not being paid fairly, whose children suffer, this is not fair, and we have to change that."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: immigrantlist
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To: sarcasm
ILLEGAL ALIEN CRIME VICTIMS:http://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.html
41 posted on 09/25/2003 5:40:33 PM PDT by 4.1O dana super trac pak (Stop the open borders death cult)
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To: steve8714
don't forget the Canadian border and the Florida coast.

I agree with you 100%.


42 posted on 09/25/2003 5:45:12 PM PDT by rdb3 (I write my life; you write what you've seen in gangsta moviez)
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To: sweetliberty
I am hearing that our governor's office (Gov. Huckabee) won't even respond to inquiries about the invasion of illegals

Dimbulb Davis here in California won't respond either - he just keeps signing into law more and more benefits for them. First the drivers' licenses, and waiting now for his signature is a bill to give them free tuition at community colleges. They get everything free here, no wonder this state houses 3 or 4 million of them.

43 posted on 09/25/2003 6:09:58 PM PDT by janetgreen
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To: sweetliberty
I just want to tell them to get the h*ll out of this country, or at least shut up if they can't (or won't) learn to speak the language.

We got lots of these scum where I work. I would like to have DICE(INS) come in and round them up. I am afraid to call. My company has a history of retaliation. Also, without proof, what do I say?

One the greasier of the scum got pulled over the local cops. No license, no registration, no insurance. He got a $142 ticket and is back to work. I can't frelling stand it anymore.

Land mines in front of these buses would make me happy. Or, falling off the road into a deep ravine.

I can't stand it anymore.

44 posted on 09/25/2003 7:39:58 PM PDT by raybbr
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To: raybbr
" He got a $142 ticket and is back to work."

Which he probably won't pay. I mean, how are they going to track him with no legitimate license and probably no legitimate address?

45 posted on 09/25/2003 7:42:28 PM PDT by sweetliberty ("Having the right to do a thing is not at all the same thing as being right in doing it.")
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To: Allegra
Looks like you guys got this night.
46 posted on 09/25/2003 7:44:12 PM PDT by raybbr
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To: Allegra
From a Cubs fan.
47 posted on 09/25/2003 7:45:16 PM PDT by raybbr
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To: sarcasm
The signs said "Immigrants are today's slaves" and "I cut your grass, I make your bed, I wash your dishes, I pick your fruit. I refuse to be invisible."

They left off: "I enter your country illegally, I use fake documentation, I drive illegally, I steal jobs from Americans, I suck up taxpayer funded services, I bankrupt your hospitals, I overcrowd your schools, I fill up your jails and prisons, I smuggle in drugs, I bring in diseases, I cry "racism" if you don't give me everything I demand ..."

48 posted on 09/25/2003 9:29:02 PM PDT by usadave
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To: FITZ; moehoward; Nea Wood; CheneyChick; Joe Hadenuf; sangoo; 4.1O dana super trac pak; ...
The worse insult yet Ping...the freakin' NY Times gives them play!
49 posted on 09/25/2003 10:24:20 PM PDT by JustPiper (Ted needs a drink- Our "W" is NOT a ONE term President !!!)
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To: american spirit
Here Ya Go, while I'm greeting the bus in downtown Chicago you can:

Dallas, TX
Saturday Sept 27 - 2:00PM
Old Red Courthouse
400 W. Commerce
Downtown Dallas
Click here for Map
Don't mess with Texas!

Gather up your friends, relatives, neighbors, and coworkers, your flags, and your picket signs, and c'mon down! Mayor Laura Miller and the Dallas City Council have promised these commie criminals a welcome wagon. Are we going to let them down?

If our government refuses to confront flagrant violation of our laws, and put a stop to it, then our government has become irrelevant, and we are being reduced to mob rule. Who will win the battle for America? Right now the only mobs given credence are aliens and communists. Are we just going to sit here in our fine decorum and let them steamroll us?

For more information contact postmaster@millionamericanmarch.com

Contact the contact person because they will be in Chi-Town that am!
50 posted on 09/25/2003 10:27:23 PM PDT by JustPiper (Ted needs a drink- Our "W" is NOT a ONE term President !!!)
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To: JustPiper
At St. Augustine Cathedral, the immigrants were greeted by more than 400 parishioners, students and others who marched alongside them and joined in singing, "We Shall Overcome."

Shame on the Catholic Church..Isn't this sacrilegious?
51 posted on 09/25/2003 10:30:20 PM PDT by Pro-Bush (If a stealth bomber crashes in a forest, will it make a sound?)
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To: sarcasm
The Anti-Protest List
52 posted on 09/25/2003 10:30:38 PM PDT by JustPiper (Ted needs a drink- Our "W" is NOT a ONE term President !!!)
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To: Afronaut
They have been told by authprities in DC do not detain, arrest them! Myself, ETERNAL WARMING, Pro Bush are organizng a massive post for all Freeper's call to arms to fight this starting the 28th, look for the post!
53 posted on 09/25/2003 10:34:13 PM PDT by JustPiper (Ted needs a drink- Our "W" is NOT a ONE term President !!!)
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To: 4.1O dana super trac pak
Bump, I am so glad you linked this factor. Also the environmental damage. The Freeper counter-protesting in Tucson for the BusRide, said one of things they were thinking of doing at the Nogales border is caring ALL their garbage back over to their side!
54 posted on 09/25/2003 10:39:20 PM PDT by JustPiper (Ted needs a drink- Our "W" is NOT a ONE term President !!!)
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To: raybbr
Our Cubbies lost tonight and Houston won! Waaaaaaaaaa....
55 posted on 09/25/2003 10:39:54 PM PDT by JustPiper (Ted needs a drink- Our "W" is NOT a ONE term President !!!)
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To: sarcasm
Funny the Tucson morning paper the Arizona Daily Star (we call it the Tucson RED Star) had a slightly different take on the story. Unlike the NYT it did not seek out an aging COMMIE to quote.


By Joseph Barrios
ARIZONA DAILY STAR

Cheers and applause greeted roughly 100 "freedom riders" on Wednesday as they rolled through Tucson on their way to Washington, D.C., to rally for immigrants' rights.

Members of the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride stepped off the bus in front of St. Augustine Cathedral, 192 S. Stone Ave., about 9:30 a.m.

Applause and chants of "Si, se puede!" - "Yes we can!" - erupted from the crowd waiting for them. Mariachis played inside the church hall.

The ride, inspired by the 1961 freedom rides for civil rights, is described by organizers as a "national mobilization" to focus public attention on immigrant rights and problems with immigration policies.

Beginning this week, buses carrying immigrants will leave from Seattle, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Houston, Miami, Minneapolis, Chicago and Boston, all to converge in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday to meet with members of Congress and then travel to New York City for a rally on Oct. 4. About 800 immigrants are taking part in the trip.

The ride is sponsored by organizations including the AFL-CIO, civil-rights groups and religious institutions.

Jesse Bhangoo, who works in computer science, was one of the Tucson residents who got on the bus Wednesday to make the trip to Washington. He said he would like to change attitudes about immigrant workers. "It's always presented as a problem and that about the only thing we could do is close the border," Bhangoo said.

Organizers have specific messages they want to convey to elected officials about immigration policy. Organizers said they want to create a "road to citizenship" for all immigrant workers, the right of immigrant workers to reunite their families, protect the rights of immigrants in the workplace and protect the civil rights and liberties of all.

Participants in the Mass and rally shared in the message.

Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas of the Catholic Diocese of Tucson, said some people equate immigrants with "criminals and terrorists."

"But look around and see ordinary people. Look and see ordinary people intent to take care of their families See ordinary people determined to live their lives with some semblance of dignity," Kicanas said.

56 posted on 09/25/2003 10:54:23 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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To: sarcasm
The Rev. Miguel Ceja, a graduate of Stanford University who entered the United States illegally from Mexico...

...who got free health care, free grade school education, etc., courtesy of citizen taxpayers, and who took a slot at a prestigious university from a citizen.

57 posted on 09/26/2003 12:00:26 AM PDT by Penner
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To: JustPiper
I was counting on this night to put the cubbies two up. Time to tape the fingernails.
58 posted on 09/26/2003 2:54:37 AM PDT by raybbr
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To: raybbr
From a Cubs fan.

Boooooooo....hissssssss! :-)

I actually like the Cubs most of the time and admire their fans. But I can't like 'em right now. I'm sure you understand.

I saw the Astros play at Wrigley in '99 and I love that ballpark and that Wrigleyville area around it.

59 posted on 09/26/2003 12:02:45 PM PDT by Allegra
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To: raybbr
Well, now we're tied again but ahead? And rained out today, its dismal here!
60 posted on 09/26/2003 7:13:58 PM PDT by JustPiper (Who is Minding Our Border's!!! 1-800- Shock Fences!!!)
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