Enough is enough: we need Dream Act now

A few days ago, I woke up thinking that I would experience an average day. Little did I know that I was going to witness one of the saddest episodes of the walk. I received a call from a good friend letting me know that Leslie Coche had been detained aboard the Tri-Rail -a local train system in Florida, from Miami to Palm Beach County, as she was going to class. I was shocked and speechless for a few seconds as I heard the voice through the receiver asking for help. Allow me to introduce who Leslie is:

Leslie is an eighteen year-old girl who had just graduated from high school with honors and could only afford two classes at Miami Dade College due to the high fees required as a “non-resident” student. She was brought to this country when she was only ten years-old and is currently the youngest inmate in Broward Transitional Center (a detention center in South Florida). What was her crime to justify her being picked up without any respect to her rights?

Leslie symbolizes the reason why we need immigration reform now that ensures family unity and equal access to education, but most importantly, she is a very clear example that our political leaders’ words do not match their actions. President Obama and his administration have continuously lied to us by saying that they are only seeking the deportation and detention of “criminals”. Our communities continue to be raided and the current system does not fail in stealing away those we love. While any student in the United States was thinking about his or her test or homework, Leslie was getting detained in the train station on her way to school. After this infamous call I imagined the following scene: Leslie sitting on a bench, waiting for the train (probably reading a book or doing homework) and out of nowhere an officer approached her to ask for her “papers”.

Why this is relevant to me in specifically? I used to take the same train to go to school, the same campus Leslie attended before she was detained a few days ago. I know that route too well to know that I could’ve been the one asked for my papers at one point and taken away.

Students like Leslie and I, who depend on the Tri-Rail to go to downtown Miami to attend school at Miami Dade College, would have to take at least two hours of public transportation. This sacrifice now became intensified by the fear inflicted on us due to the flash raids that Customs and Border Protection agents are doing. Episodes such as her detention are the reason why I walk.

I walk because I know everyday thousands of immigrant youth go to school asking themselves when their name will come up in the Department of Homeland Security’s deportation list. We have become sitting ducks, not knowing who is getting hit next.

The constant terror of deportation is such a prevalent part of our lives that we, undocumented youth, forget the strength we truly have. Last year, we stopped several deportations and this year we can’t fail to do the same. More than ever, we can’t hide or be quiet. When people come to me and ask my status I “come out” once again.

Yesterday a man who was hurting due to the sickness of his wife approached us with great dismay. He said, “The reason why my wife can’t get a liver transplant is because people like you are draining our system.”

We were able to speak and change his heart by breaking the stereotypes we heard so many times in the media through our personal narrative. In the end of the event he told us that we weren’t at all what he expected and basically realized that we weren’t in fact the cause of any of his wife’s ailments. If all of us were to do the same and talk to at least a neighbor about our status, sharing our personal, human stories, so many hearts would change.

The question that remains is: how can we prove that people like Leslie should not be criminalized and taken away? How can we ever ask for change if we are not willing to work towards it? Freedom is not free, it only comes through struggle and hardship, but most importantly through courageous acts.

Speak up! Do not keep quiet! This is your turn to make sure that your story or Leslie’s get to be told through the mouths of people who understand the issue and can properly testify on our behalf. It is up to you to either tell your story through your mouth or let people like Glenn Beck say it for you.

Some ways you can take action NOW to help Leslie Cocche is to:

Demand her immediate release from detention:

Call Janet Napolitano, Director of Department of Homeland Security, and leave comments of support for Leslie and also ask that DHS stop her deportation: 202-282-8495*

*this is an answering machine, once it is full it is out of commission for the day. Fill it up now with calls supporting Leslie.

Call Assistant Secretary to ICE, John Morton and leave a message urging him to take action and defer Leslie’s deportation: 202.732.3000*

*This is a live comment line, i.e. a human being will pick up and take your message. Be very polite “I am calling to leave a message of support for Leslie Cocche, I ask that Director Morton contact Field Director Rebbecca and defer Leslie’s deportation, she is an asset to this country.”

**You may be advised to redirect your call to the Florida field office, whose number is below. It is still important for the D.C. office to register the number of calls received on her behalf.

3) Call the Miami field office (Miami Office of Detention and Removal Operations) at (305) 207-2001 to urge deferral on Leslie’s case. If necessary, you can provide them with her “A” number, A089-231-361

3 Comments

  1. I too was once an immigrant and am now a naturalized citizen. I am concerned at how Hispanics are being ripped off by unscrupulous attorneys, notarios, and just about everyone else in regardds to Deferred Action applications. First of all – the Dream Act has not passed. What has passed is Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals – or DACA. Although many are advertising “Dream Act” it’s actually not the Act. Secondly, Hispanics are being gouged and paying up to $4,000 in some cases for simple applications. Please be careful. There is no need to pay thousands for these applications – there is not need to even pay more than $500 unless you have a complicated situation involving crimincal records, etc. Don’t get ripped off.

  2. I’d like to put in my two cents regarding this issue. Once, I too, was here illegally; now I’m a naturalized citizen. By coming here and staying illegally I broke immigration law. In short, I was a immigration criminal for a time. During that time, I did not have the same rights reserved for legal citizens and I propose I could not ask for them. To ask for the same rights as those for citizens is just plain dumb. Please do not fault the immigration officer nor the agency for doing their job. They get paid to arrest folks who are here illegally–not to go after the mugger or murderer. I also believe we cannot blame politicians. After all, politicians, for the most part, do what is asked of them or else they get voted out. Historically, when enough people want change in anything, change has always taken place, sometimes legally within the system and other times illegally by breaking the system and instituting a new one conforming to the new paradigm.

    To me at least, it seems Hispanics are not united nor organized enough to make our issues visible in the political radar of the US. We seem busy celebrating our material, and why not our intellectual, achievements and cultural differences from one another that whenever something bad happens to someone else, we give thanks it wasn’t us. Like the soldier in the front line who thinks it will the guy next to him that will get the bullet and gives thanks for living another day. When we stop celebrating our differences and realize that we face the same problems separately and as such we don’t stand a chance, then we will band together, plan our strategy and really make our voices heard and our issues addressed–not before then, I’m afraid.

    As an example: The recent march in Washington was a failure namely because it was not well planned. There was little or no publicity and its timing was dismal. It’s effect was the opposite of positive–yes, negative. I believe it hurt the cause because our opponent has seen that we lack support and planning. There are 47 million of Hispanics in the US, yet 50K showed up… this shows that this immigration issue, for all the noise and red faces we make, means very little to us.

    Make no mistake, I dream for the day when we can come together as one and make our mark in this great country that has welcomed us, just as other waves of immigrants have. When I see the landscape of Hispanic history in the US, it saddens me that we’re still in the dark ages of influence. I hope and wish for the day when we say: Basta ya! Enough already!

  3. Name any other country in the world, even in the third world, in which you can enter, stay, study or work without a visa. Do you know any? I would love to find any, but seems that in the rest of the world including ALL Latin-American countries, if you enter without a visa, you’ll be deported. Share the blame and stop accusing just the US because here life is better…

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