Hispanic and black communities have many similarities in immigration, three guest
speakers said during the "Black and Latino Migrant Relations" presentation held
early last week at California State University, Northridge.
According to the presenters, the struggles of the two ethnic groups have been
very similar, and recognizing these similarities can help end immigration and
civil rights injustices. Rhonda V. Magee, law professor at the University of San
Francisco, said similarities in immigration between Black and Latino groups
began at the start of American history, with the institution of slavery.
"(America has) relied forever on a subordinated lower class that has been
racially marked," Magee said. "Our whole standard of living has been built upon
this subordinated population, and then denying them full participation in the
political community." As African-Americans gained citizenship in the U.S., this
subordination moved on to undocumented immigrants from Latin America, she said.
Gerald Lenoir, executive director of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration,
said there is a stereotypical view of immigrants as an invasive Mexican
immigrant, but that much immigration from Latin America is caused by voluntary
U.S. trade agreements. "The North American Free Trade Agreement has hurt Mexican
farmers," Lenoir said. "U.S. corporate farmers who are subsidized flood the
Mexican market and drive Mexican farmers (who are not subsidized) out of their
country."
Isabel G. Garcia, director of the Pima County Legal Defender's Office, agreed.
"Over six million Mexican agricultural workers crossed over to the U.S. because
of NAFTA," she said. Magee said a major tie in immigration between Latino
communities and Black communities is that they were both forced to migrate into
America.
"Political, environmental, and socio-economic forces pushed these communities to
move," she said. Garcia said it is no accident that there are millions of
undocumented workers in America today, just as it was no accident that slaves
were brought to America. "Eleven million undocumented workers are in the U.S.
because our economy depends on them," she said. "We have encouraged them to come
here for over 100 years in order to exploit them."
Dr. Martha Escobar, CS UN professor of Chicano studies who helped organize the
event, said the purpose of the presentation was to open the dialogue between all
ethnic groups to analytically think about immigration. The Daily Sundial, MLP
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News Column
Hispanic and Black Communities See Similar Struggles
May 1, 2013
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Source: Copyright Chicago Defender (IL) 2013
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