This past week, workers and community members across
Massachusetts participated in days of fasting to denounce the detention and
deportation of 400,000 immigrants each year and to stand in solidarity with affected
families. The action is part of the National Fast to Say "Not One More
Deportation," and coincides with a New England-wide week of actions
against deportations.
Zion and Israel come out for the week of action to help protest
the planned deportation of their father.
Many of the fasters have been directly affected by detention
and deportation within their own families. Vivian Deleon, a 19-year-old student
from Lynn, MA, has been separated from her father for two years, following his
deportation back to her home country of Guatemala. Renata Teodoro, now 25, has
been separated from her parents since 2007, when they were detained and
deported following a raid on her home.
Rather than focusing on their own suffering, these young
women are fasting this week to show their solidarity with the millions of immigrants
that are working hard to support their families, but suffer as a result of
restrictive immigration policies. As Vivian puts it, "I decided to fast as
a symbol of the sacrifice that parents have made for their kids to give them a
better life, just like my parents did." Renata states that she decided to
fast because, "Giving up food for a day is nothing compared to what
undocumented people go through in detention."
For immigrant activists and community organizers, fasting also
provides an important opportunity to reflect on what really matters in their
work. As Monique Nguyen, director of MataHari, an organization of immigrant
domestic workers, describes, "Fasting has given me the opportunity to be
very reflective about families and communities being terrorized by
detention-deportations." Alan Pelaez, of the Queer Undocumented Immigrant
Project (QUIP) noted that while fasting, "Being hungry all day was
constantly reminding me of everything that's going on."
Alan and Laura at the press conference announcing the fast and week of action.
While each fasters' specific motivation is distinct, they
are unified in calling for an end to the separation and suffering of detainees
and families. Laura Gonzalez decided to extend her fast from one day to the
entire week, while attending a rally outside of Suffolk Detention Facility, and
watching as detainees reached through the cell bars on their windows,
struggling to communicate via paper signs and hand signals with their families,
who stood amongst a crowd of supporters on the other side of a busy highway.
Protestors send messages to the detainees...
And the people in detention respond with their own messages.
Here, one man holds up a sign saying that he's been in detention for 7 years.
Alan was also deeply moved by his experience at the
detention center, and emphasized the importance of standing in solidarity with
detainees and families in the fight to end deportations. "We all
understand what's going on, but they know it best," he stated. And he echoed
the spirit of the fast by making a call to action: "We can never forget
the messages we heard from the detainees today. We cannot ignore their
plea."






Wow, Juliana. As always in your blogs, you have introduced your readers to individuals who are directly experiencing the issue at hand, attaching a name, face, and specific circumstance to the stark statistics. This time we got to "meet" some other supporters too, and recognize that the circle of human caring keeps spinning, even in these complicated times.
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