Wednesday, August 1, 2018

The Editor - Thanks to LULAC

The Editor: The Editor was linked to the article that appears below about events that took place in El Paso and McAllen this past week-end related to the separation of children by the agencies of the Trump Administration.  The article is sourced by The Intercept.  The reporter is Debbie Nathan, with reporter Veronica G. Cardenas contributing to the story.  The story regarding El Paso is covered in the first half of the article.  The second half of the article is subtitled "Confrontation at the Dog Kennel," the way the detention center in McAllen is referred to.  If you are LULAC, that is, a LULAC'er, you should read this article and pay attention to the role LULAC and LULAC'ers played in the McAllen story.  The picture that appears below is a photograph of The Intercept_ and appears at the start of the McAllen story.  The picture shows LULAC'ers at the front of the bus.  LULAC'ers are described as laid back participants at the start of the demonstration, but that story line changes rapidly as the bus makes the scene.  LULACers are energized to the front of the bus and a confrontation ensues.  The LULAC'ers who made the McAllen visit might have brought their coat and tie image with them, but they also brought with them decades of experience that whipped them into action at a moments notice.  South Texas is not used to seeing Latino activists confronting the authorities like they saw them Saturday in McAllen.  We have not seen this level of Latino activism in South Texas in a very long time.

The person who spearheaded LULAC into McAllen this weekend was Domingo Garcia, along with Hector Flores, Rosa Rosales and Enrique "Rick" Dovalina, three former National Presidents of LULAC.  With them in McAllen were veteran LULAC'ers from different parts of Texas who answered the call to duty.

LULAC'ers from different parts of the country were following the events as they unfolded this past week-end.  They were impressed.  Some of them were high-fiving it "This is the LULAC" that I like.

LULAC is a leader of the Latino community.  The leadership that LULAC took in organizing for McAllen was very well planned out.  LULAC was able to go to McAllen, was able to make a dramatic point about how our Latino community is being impacted by the family separation crises that is evolving along the entire 2,000 mile southern border and managed to return to their LULAC homes as the better people that they are.

All LULAC'ers thank each and everyone of them for a job well done for Americans, for Latinos and for LULAC.

The Editor asks you to read the whole article here

You can read the "Confrontation at the Dog Kennel" portion of the story below the picture.  See if you can spot Rick Dovalina and Henry Rodriguez and a few other LULAC'ers.

Before you leave take a look and listen to a new video:


by Manuel “Oso” Arsiaga - Video

SET THE BABIES FREE!” — TENSIONS ESCALATE ON THE BORDER AS IMMIGRANT PARENTS SEARCH FOR SEPARATED CHILDREN....

Confrontation at the “Dog Kennel”

The El Paso event was calm. But the day before, on Saturday, frenzy erupted 600 miles to the south and east, in McAllen, Texas. Organizing for a protest there had begun four days earlier, which was just one day before Trump issued his executive order. Horror and anger about family separation motivated the organizing, which began early in the week, when the public was still unaware that the separation policy would soon be rescinded.

LULAC, the League of United Latin American Citizens, was the main organizing group. It’s a venerable, Mexican-American civil rights organization founded in Texas in the 1920s. Members, many of whom are middle-aged or elderly, had been pushed beyond their emotional limits over the past several weeks by unrelenting news of young, migrant children, mostly Latinos, caged and wailing. So, on very short order, LULAC started renting buses and asking members statewide to ride on Friday night to South Texas. The group teamed up with Faith Forward Dallas, an ecumenical group of mostly Christians, Jews, and Muslims who do social justice work together.

In all, about 500 people descended on the Border Patrol facility on Saturday. Their plan was to stand outside a Customs and Border Patrol holding area in McAllen nicknamed the “dog kennel” in Spanish, and yell to the children inside, “Los vemos! Los queremos!” “We see you! We love you!”

The protesters ended up doing just that — but in far woolier circumstances than they had imagined.

“These are not people who normally do this kind of stuff,” Alia Salem, a Faith Forward member, said about LULAC, which she calls “a zipped-up-suit organization that does not get on the front lines.” Indeed, LULAC had told its members that their demonstration should be “peaceful” and “civil,” and to wear clothes in the colors of the American flag. (Salem was turned off by that edict, but one of her friends, who, like her, is Muslim, complied with a red-white-and-blue hijab.)

In McAllen, the LULAC’ers began the protest with repetitive choruses of Los vemos, los queremos, along with some chants that are stock in trade at Latino protests: “La gente unida jamás sera vencida,” and others from the days of activist César Chávez. Their event sounded and looked like any South Texas protest: loud but rote, and punctiliously careful not to anger the authorities to action. There are just too many of those authorities to risk it: Border Patrol, state troopers, sheriff’s deputies, constables, local cops. And too many people who aren’t citizens, in a region where even a green-card holder can get deported for wrangling with the law. Not to mention someone without papers — and in the McAllen area, 1 in 8 longtime, loving-parent, good-student, hard-worker resident fits this bill.

So it was shocking, earth-shattering, when the government bus pulled out.

LULAC’s Dallas chapter president, Domingo Garcia, said he was the first to see it. It was long, shiny, and white, with dark windows. Even so, as Garcia peered at it, he saw “all these little hands waving at me.”

“There’s kids on this bus!” he yelled to the protesters.

“It was like gravity,” said Salem. “We were pulled!” In one great wave, the protesters — including a Muslim imam, Christians, Jewish men in yarmulkes, as well as older LULAC ladies in lipstick and scarves — rushed to the bus.


An immigrant child looks out from a U.S. Border Patrol bus as protesters block the street outside the U.S. Border Patrol Central Processing Center Saturday, June 23, 2018, in McAllen, Texas. Additional law enforcement officials were called in to help control the crowd and allow the bus to move. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
An immigrant child looks out from a U.S. Border Patrol bus as protesters block the street outside the U.S. Border Patrol Central Processing Center on June 23, 2018, in McAllen, Texas.
Photo: David J. Phillip/AP

“That’s when we lost it,” Salem said. “People started screaming, crying, pressing against the bus like they were willing to get run over.” Salem didn’t care anymore about the flag stuff: “There was this moment when it didn’t matter what we were wearing or our politics — those were our babies!”

“Set the babies free!” the protesters roared over and over. Some stood in front of the bus. Others sat down. The children visible in the bus waved, and others pressed their hands on the dark glass. One protester, a woman, rubbed hearts into the dust on the windows. Another blew kisses at the kids. A middle-aged woman wailed in Spanish about the niñitos. A chant went up in response to Melania Trump’s jacket: “We care! We care! We care!”
A police or Border Patrol helicopter appeared in the sky, along with scores of troopers on the ground, cops, and four dozen Border Patrol agents. The protesters were ordered to let the bus pass, and they didn’t. Everyone realized that this polite, red-white-and-blue outing had turned into a spontaneous act of incipient unlawful resistance.
A white woman stood nose to nose with a cop, begging and weeping. “Just tell me you care! Tell me you care!” The temperature was in the 90s and south-Texas steamy. “Shame on you! Shame on you!” the protesters screamed at the border agents in their green uniforms.
A congressional delegation of 25 Democrats had been touring the site earlier, surrounded by national TV reporters and their cameras. Now, amazed, the press turned its equipment to the protesters. Despite or perhaps because of this attention, Garcia, the LULAC Dallas leader, worried that the protesters were in danger. He walked up to the law enforcement officers and said, “You need to de-escalate.” The bus then went backwards, returning to the building it had come from. The protest ended up on the evening’s national and international news.
The networks didn’t mention this, but as protests go, nothing as spontaneous and fevered had happened in anyone’s memory in South Texas.
Customs and Border Patrol’s media department did not respond over the weekend to The Intercept’s emailed question about who was on the bus and where it was going. But a CBP spokesperson told the Dallas Morning News that the agency had been transferring “family groups” from its processing center in McAllen to ICE for processing (the protesters saw some adults on the bus in addition to children). And a shelter in McAllen this weekend received two migrant adults whose criminal charges were withdrawn just after Trump’s executive order was released, and who arrived at the shelter with their children.
It is impossible to say how long it will take for the more than 2,000 children who were separated from their parents to be reunited. For anguished parents, any time will be too long. And for the protesters who came to South Texas this weekend, the time may be immaterial. They feel deeply hurt by “zero tolerance.” In McAllen, they lay and stood and kissed and waved and spoke their hearts, in ways seldom seen on the border because “there is this fear,” said Marlene Guerrero Chavez, a local activist. They are not citizens, they are undocumented, or the people they organize lack status. “It’s great that they’re coming,” Guerrero Chavez said of the out-of-towners, “because a lot of local organizers aren’t able to do this.”
During the LULAC and Faith Forward Dallas protest, Chavez caught a glimmer of what is possible for the locals by working with visitors. “I hope we can get assistance,” she said, “from organizations from out of town that do civil disobedience.” She has already been in touch.
Additional reporting by Veronica G. Cardenas in McAllen, Texas.
Top photo: Immigrant families line up to enter the central bus station after they were processed and released by U.S. Customs and Border Protection on June 24, 2018, in McAllen, Texas.

2 comments:

  1. Lo viejitos tambien pueden. Unidos venceremos.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is the LULAC I know and Love!!congratulations my brothers and sisters La Lucha Sigue y no nos venceremos!

    ReplyDelete