Advertising

The Seattle Times Company

NWjobs | NWautos | NWhomes | NWsource | Free Classifieds | seattletimes.com

The Seattle Times

Local News


Our network sites seattletimes.com | Advanced

Originally published April 11, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified April 11, 2007 at 11:16 PM

E-mail article     Print view

Immigration rally focuses on children

In the weeks since her husband was stopped at the airport and then deported back to Mexico, Berenice Louis has struggled alone to support...

Seattle Times staff reporter

In the weeks since her husband was stopped at the airport and then deported back to Mexico, Berenice Louis has struggled alone to support her family.

Her husband, Juan Louis, 23, had been the breadwinner since they came to the Seattle area from Mexico four years ago. He worked construction jobs, while Berenice stayed home to care for their two young children.

Now, with Juan Louis back in Mexico where he has yet to find work, Berenice, 22, has been selling their belongings so she can keep herself and her daughters housed and fed.

Wednesday, she and her two girls were among an estimated 250 to 350 people — most children — who rallied at Westlake Park in downtown Seattle. The protesters, who later marched to the federal building, called for changes in U.S. immigration laws that would prevent such family separations.

The event drew toddlers and grandparents, mothers and fathers — immigrants from across Latin America, Asia and Africa. Some were refugees. Some such as Berenice Louis entered the country illegally. Some, like Louis, have had family members deported — fathers, husbands, cousins, sons.

They carried signs that read: "Don't abandon the children" and "Stop deportations; I need to be with my mom."

Mayor Greg Nickels, who joined the march, talked about his own family's immigrant roots and said those marching wanted for themselves and their families no less than his own grandparents did years ago.

Nickels said he wants Seattle to be the kind of city where people can feel secure answering a knock at the door late at night. And, "When you call 911, Seattle police will not ask your immigration status before they ask how they can help," he said.

March organizers, which included Hate Free Zone and Washington Community Action Network, said they want to send a message to Congress that meaningful immigration changes are needed to unite families, protect workers, safeguard due process and provide a way for an estimated 12 million undocumented workers to earn legal status.

A bill introduced in Congress last month would provide some of what advocates seek but also expand the number of detention facilities and involve local police in immigration-law enforcement.

Ira Mehlman, a spokesman with the Federation for American Immigration Reform, which supports the enforcement of immigration laws, said logic often gets lost beneath the sad stories of deportation.

"When parents break the law, they put their families in jeopardy. They are responsible," Mehlman said. "It should be no different from all the other cases where people break the law."

advertising

Dozens of immigrants have been rounded up at workplace raids across the country. And Wednesday's march came eight weeks after 51 undocumented immigrants were detained at two UPS warehouses in Auburn. Several of them have been deported.

Hilda Magana, director of the children's program at the Seattle nonprofit El Centro de la Raza, brought 58 kids from the preschool day care to the rally and march to show support, she said, for "putting families first."

None of those children was directly affected by recent raids, Magana said, but she knows of many families that were. "The kids stay here, the parents get sent back and the families are torn apart," she said.

Berenice Louis understands the burden of such separation.

Her husband, Juan, was detained at Sea-Tac International Airport in February as he was preparing to fly to Columbus, Ohio, where friends had told him jobs were plentiful.

As he approached the ticket counter, she said, a security official asked for his passport and when he couldn't produce one turned him over to immigration authorities.

Airport spokeswoman Rachel Garson said that unless someone is committing a crime, the airport's police officers typically would not stop a person or ask them for a passport. Berenice Louis said her husband was deported two weeks ago, leaving her behind and alone with their two daughters, a 3-year-old and a 4-month-old.

"The effect on us has been one of economics," Louis said through a translator. "I can't work because I need to care for the children and can't afford child care."

Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company

DNA, ballistics tie man to cop killing, police say

Reward in Greenwood arsons raised to $25,000

UPDATE - 04:54 PM
2 dead, 2 others wounded at Ore. office park

Greenwood merchants nervous after 3 more arsons

UW to honor war heroes with Medal of Honor memorial

Advertising

Video

Ken Auletta talks about "Googled"
Ken Auletta talks about Google with Brier Dudley at the Seattle Central Library.

Medal of Honor
Pelosi answers questions at Swedish Medical Center
Pelosi speaks at Swedish Medical Center
"Pistol" Pete Ryan
Mourners gather at KeyArena for slain officer's memorial
Procession for slain SPD officer
Election Night: Approve R-71
Election Night: Reject R-71
Election Night: Joe Mallahan

Marketplace

nwautos

2009's most fuel-efficient sedansnew
Choosing a new sedan? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment

Open Houses

Find this weekend's open house listings.
Or search by location:

 
Most read
Most commented
Most e-mailed
 
 
Advertising