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Jewish Group Bands With Latinos Against Discrimination

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  • Jewish Group Bands With Latinos Against Discrimination

    JEWISH GROUP BANDS WITH LATINOS AGAINST DISCRIMINATION
    By Dianne SolÍs / [email protected]

    Dallas Morning News, TX
    Nov 15 2007

    N. Texans among those at Washington immigration workshop

    Leaders of a national Jewish group say the hate being directed at
    Mexican immigrants resonates with their own experience. So they've
    taken up the cause and convened a series of meetings and workshops
    with immigrant and Mexican-American leaders, including some from
    North Texas.

    Laura Gonzalez, a Dallas college professor, and Jacobo Kupersztoch,
    a Dallas biologist, were among about three dozen Latinos from around
    the country who made the trek to Washington for sessions on organizing,
    fundraising and advocacy.

    The American Jewish Committee co-sponsored the three-day workshop with
    Mexico's Institute for Mexicans Abroad, which includes an advisory
    council established by the country's Foreign Relations Ministry.

    And immigration - an issue that has polarized the nation - took
    center stage."The whole immigration debate is not a Latino issue;
    it is an American issue," said Dina Siegel Vann, the director of the
    Latino and Latin America initiative at the American Jewish Committee.

    Ms. Siegel Vann grew up in Mexico City - and was part of the small
    but active Jewish community of about 40,000 there.

    "From a moral perspective, Jews feel that having successfully
    incorporated into the U.S., they now feel a responsibility to help
    other minorities," she said.

    Beyond that, there are practical motivations, she said. The Jewish
    population is in decline in the U.S., she said, and now numbers about
    5 million. The Hispanic population is growing and numbers 44 million.

    "Both communities have a self-interest in building a coalition," she
    said. "The only way you can advance an agenda is through a coalition."

    The American Jewish Committee has long been a strong supporter
    of immigration. Earlier this year, the AJC supported a broad plan
    to overhaul U.S. immigration laws. After the Senate failed to pass
    comprehensive immigration reform, the AJC urged Congress to continue
    working on a "balanced and bipartisan bill."

    "The Senate's failure to advance the immigration legislation only
    prolongs the national crisis in failing to deal humanely with the 12
    million undocumented immigrants in our country," said Jeffrey Sinensky,
    AJC's director of domestic policy.

    'Responsibility to lobby' At the Washington meeting, workshops
    focused on everything from effective lobbying and letter-writing to
    the power of personal relationships to a point-by-point presentation
    on advocating on Capitol Hill.

    "Script your meeting - practice speaking. ... Don't be afraid to show
    your passion, but don't let your passion overshadow your credibility,"
    read one handout.

    The group members met with legislative aides and with Rep. Howard
    Berman, a veteran Democratic legislator from Los Angeles who
    has supported measures to legalize immigrants who are in the
    U.S. unlawfully.

    They also met with various leaders of the Jewish community in the
    Washington area, and with Mexican Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan, whose
    grandfather immigrated to Mexico from Armenia.

    "Now, more than ever, we must underscore a self-evident truth:
    Migrants are not a threat to the security of the U.S.," he said,
    according to a transcript of his remarks. "They are important actors
    in the fabric of what makes America great."

    Mr. Kupersztoch said he identifies with the plight of illegal
    immigrants. "I was exposed to discrimination as a Jew in Mexico and
    exposed to discrimination as a Mexican in the U.S.," he said.

    And he hopes to use what he learned to set up a network of people,
    possibly retirees, who can establish phone trees and e-mail trees to
    call on Congress, the state Legislature and municipalities when key
    issues arise.

    The Jewish community is "so very organized, and I came away very
    positively impressed," he said. By comparison, he said, "we are not
    organized. The Latino community is not organized."

    Another idea calls for developing training plans that would enhance
    the skills of the many blue-collar workers from Mexico in North Texas,
    he said.

    Ms. Gonzalez, who is active in the League of Women Voters of Dallas,
    said political advocacy was of keen interest.

    "What we share with the Jewish community is discrimination,"
    Ms. Gonzalez said.

    "They convinced us that it is not only our right and responsibility
    to lobby," she said. "We [as] U.S. citizens have the right to go and
    lobby for the issues that relate to our interests."

    Mr. Kupersztoch and Ms. Gonzalez both served on the first advisory
    board of Mexico's Foreign Relations Ministry from 2003 through 2005.

    Praise and doubt In North Texas, some immigrant leaders praised the
    AJC effort.

    For years, some have discussed the merits of U.S. Latinos acting
    as a lobby on Mexican issues, just as U.S. Jews have done on behalf
    of Israel.

    And for nearly as many years, Mexico's halting march toward democracy
    impeded such moves because Mexican-Americans wanted little association
    with the often-corrupt ruling party of Mexico.

    But that political party rules no longer. And the current crackdown
    against Mexicans living illegally in the U.S. has served to galvanize
    many members of the community.

    The Jewish people "have suffered much more than we have, and for
    that reason they are stronger than we are," said Jorge Navarrete,
    who served on the advisory board of the Institute for Mexicans Abroad.

    "That's why we need to take advantage of them as an example for
    ourselves. Hopefully, what these people [who've attended AJC seminars]
    learned will be shared with others."

    Others question the AJC measure.

    Ira Mehlman, spokesman for the Federation for American Immigration
    Reform, a group that wants restrictions on both legal and illegal
    immigration, said many times an organization's leadership doesn't
    represent the rank and file.

    "Jewish opinion on immigration tends to probably be more sympathetic
    than the general population," said Mr. Mehlman, who is Jewish and
    co-founded the now-dormant American Jewish Immigration Policy
    Institute. "But it is not hugely out of step with the general
    population."

    Mr. Mehlman noted that FAIR also helped form a group of Hispanics
    against illegal immigration and African-Americans against illegal
    immigration in 2006, as protests for immigrant rights swept through
    such U.S. cities as Dallas, Los Angeles and Chicago.

    IMMIGRANT STATISTICS 11.6 million The estimated number of "unauthorized
    immigrants" living in the U.S. in 2006

    6.6 million, or 57% The number of "unauthorized immigrants" from Mexico

    1.64 million Unauthorized immigrant population in Texas, which is
    second only to California

    37.5 million The foreign-born population of the U.S., which includes
    those lawfully in the country

    221,000 The number of people removed from the U.S. in the fiscal year
    that ended in September

    261,000 Total number of repatriations, including for the first time
    statistics on those who chose a procedure known as voluntary departure,
    which differs legally from a deportation

    631,000 The number of removals of illegal immigrants over a three-year
    period (roughly the population of Fort Worth).

    SOURCE: Department of Homeland Security, Office of Immigration
    Statistics, and the U.S. Census Bureau

    --Boundary_(ID_XMld9Rl6BFOJLOhpXMFgYw)--
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