IRISH MAKE THEIR PRESENCE FELT IN FIGHT OVER ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION
150 from Bay Area to rally in
D.C. for legalization efforts
Tyche Hendricks, San
Francisco Chronicle, Friday, February 9, 2007
(Picture shows San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom with ILIR Vice-Chairman
Ciaran Staunton)
Irish immigrants and Irish Americans in the Bay Area are mobilizing
for another round of activism in the debate over illegal immigration.
About 1,500 people turned out for an immigration reform rally in
San Francisco last week, and 150 plan to head to Washington, D.C.,
next month to join a protest with the Irish Lobby for Immigration
Reform, a national group working to legalize undocumented immigrants.
Elaine,
a San Francisco nanny who wouldn't give her last name because she
lacks legal immigration status, plans to leave her 6-year-old son
with her sister and fly to the nation's capital to join the call
for comprehensive immigration reform on March 7.
She said she feels a sense of commonality with illegal immigrants
from Mexico, who make up the majority of the estimated 12 million
people living in the United States illegally.
"We're all in the same boat," she said. "The Irish
are lucky because we speak English and we're white: We do get treated
better. But we (undocumented immigrants) are all hard workers. We
all want a better life."
Though the Irish are only a small slice of the country's illegal
immigrant population, their outspoken activism has added another
dimension to the public perception of illegal immigrants, said Angela
Kelley, deputy director of the National Immigration Forum in Washington.
"They came last year with these white T-shirts that said 'Legalize
the Irish,' and people kind of stopped and paused and looked twice
at them on Capitol Hill," she said. "There's a substantial
Asian population, a substantial Irish population; it's not just
a Latino issue. They serve as a helpful reminder of how multifaceted
the debate is. "
The Irish have a lot in common with other immigrant groups in America,
said Margaret McPeake, co-director of the Irish Studies Program
at New College of California in San Francisco. Irish Americans have
a sense of their deep roots in the United States, combined with
a sympathy for the difficult economic and political realities in
Ireland that spurred the last big wave of immigration in the 1980s,
she said.
"That understanding makes people willing to band together
and see the Irish experience as part of a larger immigrant story,"
said McPeake.
Celine Kennelly, director of San Francisco's Irish Immigration
Pastoral Center, estimates that 50,000 of the country's 150,000
Irish-born residents are illegal, with many thousands of them in
the Bay Area. Most of them entered the country on a legitimate student,
work or tourist visa and stayed after it expired.
"The immigration system absolutely needs to be fixed,"
said Kennelly. The undocumented Irish "have employed people,
they've paid taxes, they've contributed favorably to society, they've
tried every visa option and entered the 'green card' lottery every
year. But it's becoming impossible to live here without a Social
Security number and a driver's license. It's a pressured situation."
Elaine said she wants to become a legal permanent U.S. resident
so she can build a stable life in her adopted city without fear
of being picked up by immigration authorities. She also wants the
laws to change so she take her son back to his homeland so he can
stay connected to his grandparents and his Irish heritage.
"If everyone's quiet, nothing will happen," said Elaine.
"I might as well speak out and feel like I've done something."
Kennelly said she's hopeful that, with Congress now in Democratic
hands, it will pass an immigration bill this year that includes
a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants and more legal avenues
for foreign citizens to work in the United States.
"We're going to keep knocking on doors and letting people
know this is a huge Irish issue," she said. "We need to
have it addressed in a timely and proper manner."
Crossroads Festival
Immigration will be a topic of discussion at the Crossroads Irish-American
Festival in San Francisco, March 8-17.
For more information on the festival, call (415) 437-3427.
E-mail Tyche Hendricks at thendricks@sfchronicle.com.
|