Posts Tagged ‘DREAMers’

Day 22: Embracing Different Identities

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Today is Day 22 of the Thirty Days of Love. Today’s action is to learn more about how intersecting identity works and take time to reflect on your own intersecting identities. Click here for resources, family actions, and more! Click here to sign up for the daily Thirty Days of Love emails.


A few months after I turned 13, my family moved from Panama to the United States seeking a better future in the promised land. Such a move meant significant changes—from learning a new language, to adjusting to a different culture, to reshaping my understanding of the world and my identity.

I grew up in a very diverse country in which one of my best friends had blue eyes, another was of Asian descent, and several were of Afro-Caribbean descent just like me. Such diversity under the umbrella of what it meant to be Panamanian or Hispanic seemed absolutely normal until I came to the United States and I realized that people did not expect me to speak Spanish because of my Afro-Caribbean ancestry. Understanding the intersectionality of my different identities, and learning to embrace them, are experiences that are becoming useful as I learn to navigate my time here on earth.

Because of faulty counsel by questionable immigration lawyers, my family became undocumented when I was in middle school. As the years passed, I felt like I truly belonged to the state and the community that I loved deeply, but something that I had no control over made me different, and it hindered my path towards higher education. Still, community members continued to believe in my potential and invest time and resources into ensuring I achieved such potential. So I began my own advocacy as a DREAMer to help people understand who we are, and to make a difference.

The ability of people to move past my lack of a 9-digit Social Security number and see who I am as a person served as a model for the conflicting internal journey I embarked on the day I decided I would no longer deny my sexuality in the name of my parents’ definition of what faith and God really means. Thanks to the love and support I receive from friends and spiritual leaders, and the strength to face adversity given by God, I am able to arrive at the conclusion that—yes!—I can be passionate about my love for God while embracing my identity as a gay man. Moreover, I can be an Afro-Latino Marylander who is completely proud of the many identities I’ve been blessed with, while fully embracing my sexual orientation and faith beliefs—because this is who God intends me to be.

Like many of us, my process of embracing overlapping identities is ongoing—part of the beautiful journey we call life. As we continue on our 30-day spiritual journey for social justice, please join me in exploring how we can all break down arbitrary barriers to achieve a more loving society. Click here for resources on intersectionality and ideas on how to embrace your own individual identities.

In love and solidarity,

Jonathan Jayes-Green

Jonathan Jayes-Green is a junior at Goucher College in Maryland studying Sociology and Political Science.

Witnessing for Justice in the Great Lakes State

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Randy Block, MUUSJN Director, at the public meeting in Bloomfield. Credit: Natasha Dado/TAAN

The Michigan Unitarian Universalist Social Justice Network (MUUSJN) has been hard at work witnessing for love justice in the Great Lakes State this summer.

On Tuesday evening, August 14th, a public meeting was held in Bloomfield Township to consider a proposal for a local Muslim Cultural Center. Though many attendees were opposed to the plan, MUUSJN mobilized activists from four Unitarian Universalist congregations to demonstrate on behalf of religious tolerance. They were part of an interfaith coalition that submitted testimony urging a local Planning Commission to make decisions based on respect for religious diveristy rather than Islamophobia.

Their witness received coverage in several newspapers, including this article in the Arab American News that showed real appreciation for the interfaith witness.

Wednesday, August 15th marked the first day that young, undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children could apply for deferred action. That day, Unitarian Universalists in Detroit and Lansing displayed solidarity with young Dreamers and their allies by holding Standing on the Side of Love signs at press conferences held in each city. Several UUs also volunteered at special workshops to assist dreamers to determine their eligibility for deferred action status. The program allows young, undocumented immigrants to apply for work permits and gives them two years immunity from deportation.

Lansing Banner Dreamer Press Conf. 2012-08-15

Standing on the Side of Love with Dreamers outside Lansing's Cristo Rey congregation. Credit: Randy Block

MUUSJN Director Randy Block says of the event, “I was touched that Cindy Estrada, UAW International Vice President, asked if she could hold up my Standing on the Side of Love sign that said ‘Dreamers Deserve A Chance for the American Dream.’ Of course, I said yes.”

Honoring Dream Scholars

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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.