I’m traveling to Texas to volunteer again at Karnes Detention center (south of San Antonio).
@RAICES needs Spanish speaking lawyers, or lawyers with translators. My husband is a native Spanish speaker, so we go as a team.
💠Present themselves at a port of entry and claim asylum (fear of persecution), or
💠Enter illegally and present themselves to an official as quickly as possible and claim asylum. § 208
uscis.gov/legal-resource…
Lawyers help them navigate the process.
For the next week, I’ll offer my thoughts & experiences at Karnes.
(For other volunteer ideas, see ⤵️terikanefield-blog.com/things-to-do/ )
Most refugees are from El Salvador, Guatemala & Honduras—where endemic levels of violence pose the greatest danger to women, young adults, and children.
Categories of people in danger include:
💠men who won’t join a gang (often the gang will threaten to kill their entire family)
💠men who identify as homosexual.
💠people who refuse to pay extortion money
💠people who witnessed a violent crime and cooperated with authorities
🤔Didn’t US policies in Central America exacerbate the problem (just as Putin helped destabilize Syria)?
This time it seems most are fleeing political oppression.
I listened to descriptions of totalitarianism in Cuba: If they don’t vote in national elections as required, the government finds out within a few days and they risk being killed.
They can’t hide in the country: The government will find them.
I wish everyone could take a turn in the chair I sat in yesterday.
You see what gumption looks like. Each of these women . . .
After these stories, the “we are already living in an autocracy” doomsaying sounds silly.
We’re tipping dangerously toward oligarchy, we’re not there yet.
I urge everyone to find a way to volunteer . . .
💠You’ll help save our democracy [the only way to save democracy is through democratic means], and
💠You lift yourself out of daily news cycle, which helps conquer the Outrage Dilemma. What do I mean? See⤵️
Someone asked me to tell some of their stories. I can't because of client confidentiality. . .
I may have given a wrong impression earlier, which I'd like to correct:
I haven’t worked with a client who could return safely to her home country. Stories from Congo & Guatemala are among the most horrifying. nytimes.com/2018/06/11/us/…
Sessions chilling idea that domestic violence. . .
One difference from last time I was here: There aren't enough volunteers, so many don’t get legal assistance. For many, returning home is certain death. (For others, a high probability)
As the saying goes: Whoever saves a life save the whole world.
Here was something odd: Some asylum seekers had been told (& they believed) they were better off WITHOUT a lawyer.
Remember, they’re coming from places where all government and all officials (including police) are in the hands of the local gang, or a totalitarian regime without an independent judiciary, so . . .
This is my last day in Texas. I'll be heading back to California later.
An exhausting week, but rewarding:
I not only helped a lot of people — I pushed back against barbarity.
End of journal/
I can try to answer questions.
Instead of returning home with horror stories of what I saw in detention facilities, I came home with something else:
But we have a working democracy, an independent judiciary, a free press, and meaningful elections.
Let's hold on to it. That means we must all get busy👇 terikanefield-blog.com/things-to-do/
(I'll be updating my list soon)