Before I go any further into this story, there's something we all can do to help:
The community of Postville is also organizing a humanitarian response to the raid. Please spread the word to individuals or institutions that would be willing to send donations to support families impacted by the raid. Donations should be sent to:
St. Bridget’s Hispanic Ministry Fund
c/o Sister Mary McCauley
PO Box 369
Postville, IA 52162
(mark "Postville Raid" in the memo)
For further information about providing material or monetary support, please call Sister Mary McCauley at (563) 537-0002.
For some context, here's an editorial from the Lancaster Eagle Gazette. Regardless of your views on illegal immigration, the actions of our federal government are nowhere near the best we can do in dealing with this issue:
ENFORCEMENT alone won't solve problems. The repercussions of the workplace raid in Postville, Iowa, this past Monday, the largest single-site raid in the nation, are wrenching on so many levels.
Federal immigration agents and other law officers who descended on Agriprocessors Inc., the kosher slaughterhouse in Postville, were doing their jobs. They executed search warrants related to criminal activity, as well as a civil search warrant for people believed to be in the country illegally.
But that does not diminish the painful fallout from escalating raids resulting at least in part from the failure of Congress and the president to repair the nation's broken immigration system. Such raids, though record in size, ultimately do little to resolve how this nation should sensibly regulate immigration levels or how it should address the 12 million illegal immigrants already in the U.S., many with children who are U.S. citizens. Voters should make it clear in the 2008 elections that they expect their elected representatives to pass practical, humane reforms
....
It's time to look at immigration reform as more than a political problem. It's an economic and a social problem, as Potsville illustrates. The U.S. work force needs the labor of new immigrants as it faces a shortage with baby-boomer retirements. The country needs the vitality that new immigrant bring to communities.
There's a lot of problems that need solving. Our wretched and broken immigration laws are one of them. There were big problems at that meat-packing plant. Because undocumented workers have to live in the shadows, they are often victim to horrible labor practices. Strengthening our labor laws and unions would help in this area. Finding a humane and reasonable policy to deal with the alleged 12 million undocumented workers in this country would help as well.
But raiding towns like this, terrorizing families, Halliburton built detention centers where folks not only do not receive medical care but are actually dying is not the answer.
From the New York Daily News:
The human rights scandal that immigration has become gets worse with every new revelation of official abuse, neglect and lack of accountability.
Over the last couple of weeks, it has become clear that the scandal goes beyond the raids that terrorize thousands of immigrant families, or the hodgepodge of local - and often racist - anti-immigrant laws that have emerged after Congress failed to pass a rational immigration law.
Recent revelations have exposed the blatant disregard for the lives of those detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and its private subcontractors around the country. What goes on inside immigration detention centers points to a moral crisis that threatens to shred the nation's basic values.
On May 5, New York Times reporter Nina Bernstein told the horror story of mistreatment, neglect and subsequent death of Boubacar Bah, who had been imprisoned at the Elizabeth Detention Center in New Jersey.
The 52-year-old tailor from Guinea, who had overstayed his tourist visa, became one of 66 immigrants who have died - several of them in murky circumstances - while detained in immigration jails.
Shockingly, between January 2004 and November 2007, more detainees have perished while in custody of ICE than in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo combined.
(emphasis mine)
It's no different than how we are treating detainees at Gitmo. We are treating these families as though they are hardened criminals bent on destroying our communities when in fact they work hard and are good neighbors.
Please support the citizens of Postville and please call your Congressional rep to demand we no longer turn away from this issue for fear of alienating voters ... that we all deserve good immigration laws and that no one deserves the kind of treatment we are seeing in Postville, Iowa.
We can do better. All it takes is for us to come together and demand it.
And for those of you who wish to hide behind the bogus patriotic, flag-pin wearing, jingoistic "but they are ILLEGAL! What don't you undertand about illegal!" I would respond: What don't you understand about human rights abuses? If you think torture is ok, and Gitmo is just fine, then continue with this bogus reasoning. If not, then let's get together to end this injustice, which stains our nation no less than our torture policies.
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