Friday 2 February 2007

RITMO and the BEATITUDES

I do what I can to try and keep up with what is going on back home in America. Mainly because most of my friends and family back in the US expect or assume that I would know what is happening on the national level. To be honest, this sometimes annoys me, as I know they will not take the time and energy it requires to read up on what is happening in the community and country where God has placed me. I do care always about what is happening in their world. But if I let it consume the hours in my day to watch or read only American news, I become less of the community here in the UK.

So, to that effect, I try to gauge the mood and progress of American affairs through reading newspapers with columnists and journalists I find thought-provoking and globally savvy (i.e., The Washington Post), as well as finding out what goes on locally in the hometown where my folks live and hold our history (i.e., The Abilene Reporter News, also dubbed by locals as The Abilene Distorter News). One source informs me of the death of national figures who have inspired me, like Molly Ivins. The other notifies me of the deaths of those precious souls who have shaped and touched my life in personal and spiritual ways, before my family knows to E-mail me with the news.

(Warning: My husband says I'm starting to get preachy here...)

To go beyond these two print sources, as mentioned above, would short-circuit any energy for living and becoming engaged in the lives of those in my current village community in the UK. But sometimes I read a story that blends elements of my life on both sides of the ocean. And from today’s Washington Post comes the article, ‘Border Policy’s Success Strains Resources’, brilliantly written by Spencer S. Hsu and Sylvia Moreno, one I will not be able to put down for a good while.

After reading this, I felt compelled to write the authors the following:


Thank you for finally bringing some light to this situation, with an American twist. It reminds me of the woes we went through here in the UK with the Sangatte refugee camp, its consequences, and ultimate closure. Hard to believe it’s been almost four years! Detention centres for illegal immigrant detainees pose many problems, and rarely are ideal solutions borne through this story of the human saga. Judgment, ignorance, and naiveté are the attitudes which first must seemingly be conquered before positive progress and humane justice can get on with the task of helping illegal immigrants or citizens in the countries they run to rebuild lives or society. The comments to your article read so far attest to this. Many of those commenting do not seem to understand your article is addressing illegal immigrants who are non-Mexicans. The vitriol is glaring. I am saddened, but not totally disheartened. Yet.


By the rest of the world’s standards, the saga of all those involved in these refugee camps, for both the American citizen and the illegal immigrant, is just beginning.


This excerpt from the article got my immediate attention:


Ringed by barbed wire, a futuristic tent city rises from the Rio Grande Valley in the remote southern tip of Texas, the largest camp in a federal detention system rapidly gearing up to keep pace with Washington's increasing demand for stronger enforcement of immigration laws.


About 2,000 illegal immigrants, part of a record 26,500 held across the United States by federal authorities, will call the 10 giant tents home for weeks, months and perhaps years before they are removed from the United States and sent back to their home countries.

The $65 million tent city, built hastily last summer between a federal prison and a county jail, marks both the success and the limits of the government's new policy of holding captured non-Mexicans until they are sent home. Previously, most such detainees were released into the United States before hearings, and a majority simply disappeared.

The new policy has led to a dramatic decline in border crossings by non-Mexicans, according to the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.


I highlighted ‘non-Mexicans’ because many readers who have commented have misread the aim of this article’s authors to show what is being done for those illegal immigrants who come from other nations besides Mexico.

It is already being dubbed Ritmo. But it is hardly The Ritz for those unfortunate enough to be placed there. Indeed, it belongs to a group of centres that will take a while to get a 5-star rating:

An inspector general's report last month on a sampling of five U.S. immigration detention facilities found inhumane and unsafe conditions, including inadequate health care, the presence of vermin, limited access to clean underwear and undercooked poultry. Although ICE standards require that immigrants have access to phones and pro bono law offices, investigators found phones missing, not working or connected to non-working numbers.

Illegal immigration is a topic that has polarised not only the American citizens, but citizens in the UK. Feelings of resentment, hatred, and injustice stemming from those who are blessed to be born with ‘constitutional rights’ seem to supersede anything that resembles Christ-like compassion. Tolerance becomes a dirty word.

How would The Beatitudes of our Lord reside inside the walls of places like Ritmo?

Turn the coin and fly into another continent to ask that same question. My husband and I recently viewed ‘Blood Diamond’, and were reminded of the squalor of humanity in the visage of a refugee camp inhabited by one million desperate souls, mostly illegal refugees from neighbouring African nations. I could just about taste the red, gritty dust between my teeth and feel the flies bombard my eyes and nose.

In a nation – and yes, a state like Texas with its preponderance for Christian church culture unlike any other in the world -- which has sold its brand to the rest of the world as a caring Christian nation with solid family values, one does not expect to have to ask that question and demand answers. But apparently its time has come.

With roughly 1.6 million illegal immigrants in some stage of immigration proceedings, ICE holds more inmates a night than Clarion hotels have guests, operates nearly as many vehicles as Greyhound has buses and flies more people each day than do many small U.S. airlines.

Many American and British citizens want to know why deportation of an illegal immigrant cannot happen immediately. For most, the question is a knee-jerk reaction. They have not taken the time to talk to immigration experts or attorneys in their midst, or even invested energy in a relationship with a foreigner, legal or otherwise. It’s probably been years since they had to sit it out in a boring social studies, world history, or geography class. None of those courses would ever become relevant to their daily lives. It becomes much easier to judge the surface than to help solve the problems of those who become entangled beneath that deep, murky surface.

But for those of us who have become familiar with the processes, we first learn and then always become aware of the many complexities of the laws involved, national and international. Within these laws are many shades of grey. When I worked as the office manager for a British consultancy group seconded to a utilities company in Texas, they were required by their visa stipulations to return home every three months in order to hold onto their visa to stay in the US and retain their work permit.

Sounds simple enough, right? But after many of them had been working legally in America for their first five months, I learned through our company’s New York office that the director of US operations was flagrantly flaunting the rules. He was British, of Indian descent, and had previously been fired by one of the Big Five accounting firms for dodgy dealings. For months he refused to listen to us when we warned him he needed to abide by the advice of a legit immigration law firm in Manhattan. While he was secretly scamming the company, he also threatened to fire some of us Americans who were concerned about the legal ramifications. Unbeknownst to the diligent hard-working Brits whom I was looking after in Texas, they thought their visa status was solid.

It was a tense situation in our Texas and New York offices. By the time we exposed the truth and forced the director’s hand with the powers that be back in the UK, it was too late for one of the young consultants and his family to return to the US. In a sense, they were fortunate. But it was a sad thing for me to ring them up on their mobile phone, whilst they were fighting traffic in Central London, to tell them they could not come back due to an illegal and irresponsible oversight by the director (who is still scamming, but as a private contractor). Instead we had to make arrangements to ship all their belongings, including their baby’s furniture and equipment, back to the UK without them being present. As angry as they were, at least this good British family did not have to suffer the humiliation of being hand-cuffed and detained whilst wading through the process of deportation in a cold prison-like facility, with no relatives or close friends nearby.

Taylor, Texas near Round Rock and Austin, will soon become home for illegal immigrant families when a new centre welcomes them with 512 beds. Those in Texas who harbour objections to the illegal Mexicans in their midst might all breathe a sigh of relief to know those beds will only be slept in by illegals from other nations.

With all the Christian communities in Taylor, Round Rock and Austin, how many will be genuinely interested in finding out about these newest neighbours? The website for Taylor, invites those coming to the city ‘… to explore Taylor...A city with a true sense of community, and a clear vision for the future!’ Wow. How honest are they about this statement? According to today’s Washington Post article:

Legal advocates contend that some of the older facilities where immigrants are housed are in deplorable condition and that growing pains afflict even new facilities.


Under fire in Taylor, for example, ICE has expanded hours of daily schooling for children from one to seven hours to meet Texas guidelines.

If we are Believers we should take politics out of the equation when looking at the living conditions our democratic government imposes on people, many who do innocently get caught in the trap of our immigration laws. I am also speaking of those here in the UK. Those who bled through the Channel Tunnel and are still here after the closure of the Sangatte refugee camp in France, near Calais, are being sent to appalling old military facilities. So it is certainly not any better than those conditions found in Texas. Consider what is being observed at places like Ritmo:

Detainees are subject to penal system practices, such as group punishment for disciplinary infractions. The tents are windowless and the walls are blank, and no partitions or doors separate the five toilets, five sinks, five shower heads and eating areas. Lacking utensils on some days, detainees eat with their hands.

Because lights are on around the clock, a visitor finds many occupants buried in their blankets throughout the day. The stillness and torpor of the pod's communal room, where 50 to 60 people dwell, are noticeable.

According to Hsu and Moreno, Jodi Goodwin, an immigration lawyer from Harlingen:

‘… described a group of women who huddled in a recreation yard on a recent 40-degree day with a 25-mph wind. "They had no blanket, no sweat shirt, no jacket," she said. "Officers were wearing earmuffs, and detainees were outside for an hour with short-sleeved polyester uniforms and shower shoes and not necessarily socks."
The assistant director of ICE detention and removal operations, Gary Mead, seems at best naïve in his current assessment of the long-term solution:

"The short answer is, it is not sustainable," Mead said. "There comes a
point where we can't detain any more people. Hopefully, prior to getting there, the
deterrence factor will kick in."


His short answer is correct. However, if he and the others in command of ICE were to take any lessons from Sangatte, Darfur, Ethiopia, etc., they will note that there has never been a successful deterrence factor.

But what would happen if just one church community close to Ritmo became involved and were to extend The Beatitudes of Christ inside just one of those Kevlar tents?

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2 Comments:

Blogger R-Liz said...

Deb-- You need to come and do some circuit preaching within the US (and perhaps in the UK, too). Isn't it INSANE how so many Christians in the states identify more with being an American than they do with being a follower of Christ? (And even more insane is how many people have the two completely intertwined and confused.)

An elder and his wife in our church have decided to sell everything they own here and move to Greece to work with refugees. In the months leading up to making their big move, they have been on a mission to get us to think about, care about, identify with those who are displaced in our world. I happen to have always lived in a financially stable home in the USA, but I could have very well been born into a desperately poor family, in a country that's deemed third-world. War, famine, hunger, or any other number of things will put any able-bodied person on the move towards better things, making the idea of borders more than moot.

A different color of skin, or poorer socio-economic class, or different religion doesn't make someone any less of my brother or sister. But we are so nationalistic, the idea that an Iraqi, muslim woman should be treated just as much like a sister as my actual sister is almost seen as heresy in American churches.

Keep preachin' American-UK sister.

12 February, 2007 23:17  
Blogger Deb said...

Hey, R-Liz, great to meet up with you here again!

Love the story about the couple in Greece. What a blessing for you to have them in your midst and to be able to learn from them!

American Christians are not the only ones to succumb to nationalistic pride. They just can't seem to tolerate others who feel the same way about their country. It is scary how it has managed to seep into the church culture in the USA over the past century and sink its talons into this one.

People forget there are many Iraqi Christians who came to their faith before missionaries from the West brought their own brand over. They are suffering greatly now, too. And it is not easy to treat muslim women as 'sisters' even here in the UK. There is much that both races have missed in the art of assimilation. Don't be too dismissive -- small steps build great bridges.

And wherever we were born, to whatever situation, we remember that God gifted us with our particular heritage -- sometimes difficult to accept during historical moments of national embarrassment! He did so for reasons only he in his wisdom chooses to reveal to us at different points along our journey with him. Don't be so hard on yourself or where you came from. Just appreciate what you have been blessed with so through his amazing, wide love you can bless others.

Thanks always for your comments, thoughtful and provoking...blessings! (and yes, I owe you an e-mail)

:)

14 February, 2007 01:17  

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