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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

The Rise of the Undocumented Student Movement

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#1
12-02-2008, 04:00 PM
Senior Member
From San Francisco Bay Area
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MAGraduate's Avatar
MAGraduate
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One of the few times I am going to praise ourselves like Gheenie Meanie does, but not without warnings of complacency. Now is the time to get organized and let everyone know of the various things we are trying to do for DREAM.
******************************************************************
After the defeat of the DREAM Act last year, William Gheen, the leader of ALIPAC, who deplores undocumented youth and wants to deport all such students, issued a call for us to stay down: “we should never gloat, but it is time to rub these losses in to our opposition. They need to stay down, instead of forcing us to knock them down again and again.”

These are the values of ALIPAC—immense hatred towards children that were brought here through no choice of their own, American children who want to serve this country, who are the future leaders of this land.

The subaltern has answered Gheen’s coarse demands. In one year since the failure of the DREAM Act, undocumented students have come together in larger numbers than ever before, setting up organizations, networking online, making videos, blogging and petitioning for change.

Youth in the usually-somber waiting rooms of history are bustling with renewed enthusiasm and energy. Trapped as a marginal status, ignored by the mainstream media, with their backs to the wall and everything to lose, undocumented youth are emerging as leaders in their own movement. Take a look at the Ideas for Change campaign at Change.org–the DREAM Act is ahead by a landslide (don’t forget to register and vote), thanks in no part, to the efforts of undocumented students and allies. Following the early success of the Change.org organizing, DreamACTivist and Co. will be back with a spree of actions very soon so remember to get on their twitter or join the new BAMN DREAM fanpage.

In a paper on alternative nationalisms this past year, I wrote:

The ‘politics of waiting’ initiated by stringent United States immigration laws has indeed spurred the rise of a community of undocumented students. United in their desire to be recognized as Americans who deserve the chance to apply for citizenship, they question the ‘alien’ assumption of their character, the ‘otherness’ label that is given to them as an ‘a priori.’

The beneficiaries of the federal DREAM Act are anything but alien—from their slight to unaccented discourses, their spirit to fight their own battles, survival in the face of great opposition and obstacles, these students are American in every way besides a piece of paper: a piece of paper, a green card, that would confer the arbitrary privilege of ‘citizenship’ on these students, a social construct that students are organizing and fighting to achieve by all means. As the Oscar Wilde quote goes “we live in an age when unnecessary things are our only necessities.” In effect, these students are fighting to inherit a large tax burden, serve and die for a country that refuses to acknowledge them, pay hefty loans and mortgages, and to be the force of change and innovation in an eroding Pax Americana. ‘Freedom’ does come with its burden of ironies.

When and how did this happen? Roberto Gonzales traces the emergence of undocumented youth organizing to the immigration marches in 2006. This is not to say that undocumented youth organizing did not exist prior to that movement, but that they cemented a place and social category for themselves. Gonzales writes,

“Civic activity has been on the rise among undocumented youth on college campuses and in communities. New generations of activists are being born out of the very struggle to become ‘American’ and in the process, they are rewriting their own stories.”

Branching out across the United States and the web, undocumented students are now using emerging media technologies to organize for the DREAM Act. And the subaltern is not monolithic but it is united in its goals — Take a look at SIM from Massachusetts, the UCLA-based Underground Undergrads, BAMN on the DREAM Act, A DREAM Deferred, DreamACTivist, One DREAM 2009 and the main online social network–DAP. These are youth based movements—online and offline—led and charged primarily by undocumented students. The subaltern is speaking, telling her/his stories and logically putting forth arguments for change.

The undocumented youth movement embraces all segments of its population: the best and the brightest but also the ones that are struggling through school, the ones without any papers and even the ones that are sponsored. BAMN organizer Ronald Cruz has called for a rally in solidarity with Day Without A Gay on Dec 10, the leaders of DreamACTivist.org are openly queer and pinpoint the diversity of DREAM Act students in their short biography listings for the media.

For far too long, these students have been betrayed by mainstream DC ‘pro-migrant’ organizations in the fight for the DREAM Act. It is analogous to the NoonProp8 campaign in Campaign: a blatant failure of top-down organizing, horrendous outreach, and keeping the ‘subaltern’ in the shadows while trying to argue for the subaltern. This time the fight for the DREAM Act and for immigration reform, is likely to be different. As Kyle from Citizen Orange states, “nativists better watch out, because this is going to be a much different fight the next time comprehensive immigration reform comes up. We’re much more organized than we were just a year ago.” A more comprehensive post detailing the growing power of the sanctuary sphere and the defeat of nativism is here.

After graduating with a Masters last year, I fretted about how to turn the state of limbo and desperation into a tool for positive and productive social change for everyone. A year later, our hard-work in the face of adversity has translated into gains. While many have been denied the American dream, we must follow the advice of our parents, seize the day and mold our own dreams. Lets not get complacent or overconfident, lets not work separately from each other. We must continue to strive forward with our backs to the wall, support each other and grow together as a movement if we want to win our Dreams, and together we can and we will.

In solidarity,
DreamACTivist.

Here is the article link:
http://dreamactivist.org/2008/12/02/...outh-movement/

Stay tuned for more actions this weekend. Get on the twitter (http://twitter.com/DREAMAct) , the new BAMN facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/pages/OBAMA-...1202252?ref=mf) and on the mailing list [email protected]
__________________
Founder, Managing Attorney at Lal Legal
Formerly Undocumented
J.D., The George Washington University Law School, 2013
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#2
12-02-2008, 04:31 PM
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Joined in Sep 2007
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dado123
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"In effect, these students are fighting to inherit a large tax burden, serve and die for a country that refuses to acknowledge them, pay hefty loans and mortgages, and to be the force of change and innovation in an eroding Pax Americana. ‘Freedom’ does come with its burden of ironies."

Your cut on how dreamers face uncertainties is very well written, in my opinion. However, if I may add my two sense, inheritance of large tax burden's, hefyt loans and mortages, and serving to die, aggregates to an American lifestyle. For instance, the majority of my family and friends all have: loans, pay taxes, and serve in the military. I would not mind paying hefty taxes, nor would I advice a friend NOT to join the military because of the risk of personal bloodshed. To summarize if we we want to be American's that contribute to the economy and provide human capital for America we should be open and willing to take risk of serving in the military, getting loans, and paying taxes, is that we are fighting for? (Of course we need some type of legal status to do all that).
Last edited by dado123; 12-02-2008 at 04:34 PM..
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#3
12-02-2008, 04:43 PM
Senior Member
From San Francisco Bay Area
Joined in Oct 2007
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MAGraduate
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Quote:
However, if I may add my two sense, inheritance of large tax burden's, hefyt loans and mortages, and serving to die, aggregates to an American lifestyle.
That's precisely what my two lines meant and how it is in effect, an irony especially in light of the fact that there are people who don't want us to pay into their own social security.
__________________
Founder, Managing Attorney at Lal Legal
Formerly Undocumented
J.D., The George Washington University Law School, 2013
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#4
12-02-2008, 05:53 PM
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hopefulintheshadows
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Nice application of the Oscar Wilde quote. I loved it. Thank you and those who are not only active, but are making huge efforts to organize, promote our movement, and break down ignorance on the subject. Media attention is critical, because once people learn about what the DREAM Act does, most agree with it. There are so many of us, that if everyone contributes with what they can (talents or time), we can push for DREAM Act to pass in 2009.
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#5
12-05-2008, 12:29 AM
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lu001
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Nice article MAG. I like the parallel with the No on 8 campaign, outreach is essential. I have an idea for a project, but I need the help of internet gurus. I'll send you an email this weekend. My blog should be ready to go by then too.
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