Posts Tagged ‘DREAM Act’

Taking Our Voice to the White House for Immigration Reform

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Taking Our Voice to the White House for Immigration Reform Share/Save/Bookmark Dec 19, 2012

Members of the IIC coalition including Rev. Roshaven (center) with Ms. Rodriguez.

Yesterday, I went with fellow members of the Interfaith Immigration Coalition (IIC) Steering Committee to meet with Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Associate Director of Latino Affairs and Immigration in the White House Office of Public Engagement, and present our list of key principles for compassionate, comprehensive immigration reform to the Obama Administration. I felt honored to represent the Unitarian Universalist community and proud of the good work that so many of our congregational and community leaders have done for migrant justice and the Beloved Community.

For us, any immigration reform that does not include a pathway to citizenship and prioritize keeping families together is unacceptable. As people of faith, we are calling for compassionate immigration reform legislation that:

• Addresses the root causes of migration,
• Creates a process for undocumented immigrants to earn citizenship,
• Keeps families together,
• Enacts the DREAM Act,
• Protects workers’ rights including agricultural workers,
• Places humanitarian values at the center of enforcement policies, and
• Protects refugees and migrant survivors of violence.

What can you do to help support our work for compassionate, comprehensive immigration reform? Local congregations and individual faith leaders can sign on to our letter to Congress listing key principles of immigration reform. Click here to learn more.

Additionally, your congregation or community group can participate in the upcoming Breaking Bread and Building Bridges campaign—a program to create and strengthen relationships between people of faith, impacted communities, and immigrants’ rights groups, and increase local capacity to effectively advocate for just immigration policies.

Keep your eye out in the coming weeks—we are also organizing a national immigration reform call-in on the day after Inauguration (January 22). Join folks from across the country in asking President Obama and Congress to enact compassionate, comprehensive immigration reform that includes a pathway to citizenship and keeps families together. The IIC Steering Committee will be visiting key members of congress on that same day. Add your voice to ours and help ensure that the faith community is heard!


Rev. Craig C. Roshaven

This post was written by Rev. Craig Roshaven, Unitarian Universalist Association Witness Ministries Director and a leader in the Interfaith Immigration Coalition (IIC) Steering Committee.

Dream. Act.

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Dream. Act. Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 26, 2012
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Rev. Evan Keely

This November, voters in Maryland will cast ballots on Question 4—a referendum on a statewide version of the DREAM Act, which would allow undocumented students to pay in-state tuition at Maryland community colleges. Several weeks ago, Rev. Evan Keely, Interim Senior Minister at Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church in Bethesda, preached on the topic of immigration and education in a powerful sermon entitled “Dream. Act.” Here is an excerpt:

I want everyone in this congregation to do two things. I want us to dream and I want us to act. I want us to dream, together, as a people of faith, of a world in which access to education is increased. I want us to dream of a world in which people who want to make a contribution to our society are given the chance to do so. Then, I want us to act to make that dream a reality. Dream of a future, here in the state of Maryland, where obstacles to education will be lowered. Because we all know—as my family history demonstrates, as the history of the American Republic demonstrates, as the history of the world demonstrates over and over again—that education is a key, sometimes perhaps even the key, to a better future.

Education breaks cycles of poverty and despair. Education equips people to contribute meaningfully to society. Education, especially higher education here in the USA, is very expensive. That’s a fact. If we can lower those barriers, if we can create more opportunity for people to get an education—people who want to expand their horizons, people who want to give back, people who want to contribute something to society—if we can make that just a little bit easier, why in the name of God wouldn’t we?

All these young scholars who would be the direct beneficiaries of the DREAM Act are asking for is the right and the opportunity—as people who were brought to this country as children, people who live here in Maryland, people who have attended and graduated from a high school here in Maryland, whose families have paid taxes here in Maryland, who have a good character—all these people are asking for is a chance. And I think we have a moral responsibility as a people of faith to do everything we can to give them this chance.

This is where we move from dreaming to acting… This is a question of faith for us. This is a question of living our faith. This is question of being a Unitarian Universalist in the world and how we live our faith… [We must] show that people of all walks of life support this initiative, not a small group of people who want special rights or amnesty. The message that we proclaim to the world by showing publically our support for Question 4 is that all of us, all of us, stand to benefit when hardworking people are given the chance to make a contribution to society. An investment in education, which is what the DREAM Act is, is an investment in the betterment of society.

[The holy work of justice] is a difficult struggle. There is a lot of work for us to do together, but we have the resources and the talent and the means to move our country forward in a direction that we as a people of faith believe is right and the direction that is best for all of our people.

[Our faith teaches] the holy power of people coming together, people who are different—people with different backgrounds and different ideas and different experiences and different ways of loving and different ways of looking—coming together and seeing each other not as “alien,” not as “other,” not as a threat, not using the word “illegal” as a noun, but to see in the face of someone different from ourselves, to see the holy there, to see the divine there, to discover the divine in the interaction which may at times feel threatening and confusing and awkward and a little scary…That is at the core of our faith.

Racism and xenophobia try to convince us that certain people are different, they are not as good as the “we” that we perceive ourselves to be. In other words, racism and xenophobia put up a wall of judgment and fear that prevent us from encountering one another as human beings. So by voting for Question 4, we are knocking down that wall of judgment and fear. Like a mighty trumpet blast of love, we’re knocking down that wall and reaching out to one another in understanding and hope. By voting for Question 4, we’re saying no to racism and xenophobia. We are saying yes to being in relationship with others as human beings.

Click here to download an audio recording of Rev. Keely’s full sermon, “Dream. Act.” If you’re a Maryland resident and would like to get involved with the DREAM Act campaign, click here to learn more.

Help Me Follow My Dreams

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Help Me Follow My Dreams Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 04, 2012

My name is John. I am a college student, a Marylander, and I am also a DREAMer.

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Maryland DREAMers

I came here when I was about 12 years old from Senegal. My father was a diplomat. A situation arose where he had to leave and my family lost our status. We struggled a lot, but I always saw education as a means to cope with what was going on and better myself as a person. I currently attend Montgomery College, one of the few schools that allows me to pay in-state tuition even though I am undocumented.

Please help me ensure that all Maryland students have an equal opportunity to pursue higher education. Click here to pledge to vote and tell four others about the DREAM campaign.

For a long time, I felt hopeless because I saw no way to advance, even though I did very well in school, and was chosen for a leadership program. I heard about the Maryland DREAM Act on the news, but I didn’t think there was anything I could do to change my situation. I had become embedded in America culture, but felt abandoned by my adopted country.

Attending Montgomery College has opened doors for me. If the Maryland DREAM Act fails, it would not only prevent thousands of Maryland students from pursuing higher education, but also jeopardize my ability to continue my own studies. Higher education provides the opportunities we need to become productive members of American society.

Put your faith into action and speak out for the Maryland DREAM Act. Please pledge to vote and and tell four others about the DREAM campaign.

I am writing today, not so you will feel sorry for me, but to inspire you and give you a reason to act. Please go and speak out for something that will make a difference in my life and the lives of so many others like me. Please help to give us the future we dream about.

In justice,

John
DREAMer
Maryland


The message above went out on Thursday, October 4, 2012 to Standing on the Side of Love supporters who live in Maryland. You can sign-up for these emails here.

Honoring Dream Scholars

No Comments | Share On Facebook| Honoring Dream Scholars Share/Save/Bookmark Jul 14, 2012
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Dream Scholars

Last month, fourteen young people from Virginia received generous college scholarships from a local campaign called the Dream Project. The Dream Project’s mission is to encourage and support promising low-income immigrant students in the pursuit of higher education. Last year, only four scholarships were awarded. This year, the Dream Project was able to dramatically increase the number of  Dream Scholars due to the support of many individuals and organizations, including the Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington, VA. Members of UUCA have contributed to the Dream Project in a variety of ways, from serving on the organization’s Board of Trustees to donating time, funds, and even frequent flyer miles.

The keynote speaker for the award ceremony was Rev. Carlton Elliott Smith, minister of the UU Church of Arlington. He shared some of his own story with the audience, speaking about how he found Unitarian Universalism and how his faith informs his work for immigrant justice.

He told the Dream Scholars:

“I do believe that our gifts make room for us, and Dreamers, your gifts will make room for you. Each of us has to apply ourselves, and draw the meaning form our lives everyday. Do everything you know to do in order to bring your dreams into reality. Stay open, though, to the mystery of life, the mystery of dreams. You may be one of the ones whose dream comes true. Or you might be like me, who started out with one set of dreams, but whose dreams kept changing as life presented new people, new friends, new circumstances, new windows and doors of opportunity. Northern Virginia needs you. The United States needs you, whether all of its citizens know that or not. But more than that, the world needs you, with your particular gifts and talents, passions and perspectives.”

dream_project_logoWould you like to contribute to this initiative? You can send a check payable to “Dream Project” to 3000 Military Road, Arlington, VA 22207 or donate online at www.dreamproject-va.com.

Students can apply to be a Dream Scholar if they (1) were born outside of the United States or has a parent born outside of the United States, (2) are graduating from high school in Virginia and planning to attend an accredited college or university, and (3) have demonstrated academic achievement, financial need, perseverance in the face of adversity, leadership, and commitment to their community. If you know a student who fits these requirements, encourage them to apply to be a Dream Scholar here.

DREAM Sabbath at Unity Temple UU Congregation in Oak Park, IL

2 Comments | Share On Facebook| DREAM Sabbath at Unity Temple UU Congregation in Oak Park, IL Share/Save/Bookmark Oct 14, 2011

by Shirley Lundin, Co-Coordinator of the Immigration Action Team of the Unity Temple Unitarian Universalist Congregation Social Mission Committee

Unity Church

Unity Church

The Immigration Task Force of Unity Temple Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Oak Park, IL, with full support and encouragement from Rev. Alan Taylor, presented two worship services on Sunday October 9, 2011, sharing impressions and activities relating to immigration justice. Each of four task force members briefly shared personal reasons for responding to the plight of undocumented people in our country.

Juan Ramirez, now twenty-five years old and of Mexican origin, was brought to the U.S. when he was a toddler. He went to school here, and earned his Bachelor’s degree from a Southern university, before being arrested by ICE officers on a bus headed for Rochester, NY, for not having proper documentation.

He described his treatment at the hands of Homeland Security: being jump-suited and locked up with no legal recourse, with bail set at $5,000. When his family struggled to make bail, he was released. He knew he would have just a few months before he wold be deported to Mexico, a country he has never known. With the help of Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, Juan was given one more year to become “legal.” Juan’s story was an elegant reminder of the plight of law abiding but undocumented people in this country. Rev. Taylor spoke about the upcoming Phoenix General Assembly, as well as UUA President Peter Morales’ arrest in Phoenix last July for civil disobedience.

The service begins a year of planned immigration actions for the congregation, including offering the UUA curriculum, “Immigration as a Moral Issue,” participating in vigils at the Dept. of Homeland Security building in Chicago’s loop, and more, culminating with a congregational vote to become an “Immigrant Welcoming Congregation.”

Editor’s Note: Congregations can still participate as the DREAM Sabbath has been extended through the end of October. Include a reading in your worship service, sponsor an event with a DREAMER, or host a table in social hour with information. See our webpage for resources.