Stand in Support of DREAMERS
Justice Perspective
– September 2017
Deacon Don Weigel
Parents will do just about anything for their children. Sacrifice is a quality that seems built in to
being a parent, and protecting your children from danger, suffering, or threats
to their life and well-being is both natural and expected.
Is it any wonder, then, why parents who were escaping
dangerous conditions in their own land would bring their children with them? Or
is it beyond belief that things could be so bad in some places that parents
would send their children away – even alone – to find safety or a better life
in another land?
Over the past few years, I have had the opportunity to
travel to places like El Salvador and Guatemala, and I have witnessed the
poverty, crime, and gang culture that pervades those places and many of their
neighboring countries as well. As beautiful as those countries are, and as
genuine as their people are, the conditions under which they live can sometimes
be so extremely dangerous or unlivable that they choose to flee their country
in hopes for a better life in ours.
Put aside for the moment the actions of the parents who entered
the U. S. without going through the proper procedures, and think about the
children that they brought with them. For their children, brought into our
country sometimes at a very young age, the U. S. is the only country they have
really known; they have attended school, played with their classmates and
neighbors, and as they have grown up they have worked and paid taxes, served in
the military, or become leaders in their parishes or communities.
These children have been called DREAMERS, and in 2012, the
Obama administration began a program called DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals), which gave protection to these undocumented immigrants who came here
as children, have lived here since 2007, and met other requirements. There are
nearly 800,000 young people who have registered for this program and it has
allowed them to work and study in the U.S.
For various political reasons, that program is now in
jeopardy, and the DREAMERS now may face deportation – even if they have
committed no crime, and have been contributing members of our society.
In order to protect them, a bipartisan bill has been
introduced in both houses of Congress. It is called The Dream Act of 2017
(S.1615 in the Senate and H.R.3440 in the House of Representatives). The bill
would provide young undocumented immigrants - who were brought to the United
States as children and have lived in the U.S. at least four years - protection
from deportation and an opportunity to obtain legal status if they meet certain
requirements.
The US Bishops support this bill, and have always supported
the DREAMERS because as Catholics we
believe in protecting the dignity of every human being, especially that of our
children.
You can lend your support to the effort to pass this bill by
going to www.justiceforimmigrants.org,
the Bishops’ site for immigration issues, and tell your Senator and
Representative to sponsor and support this bill that will ensure the dignity
and security of DREAMERS.
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