😎🌮🍱🍝🍜 ANOTHER “FOOD DRIVEN” IMMIGRANT SUCCESS STORY!

La Cocina, a San Francisco-based nonprofit group, is helping low-income women and immigrants start their own food businesses. The 130 chef-owners receive support, including access to an industrial kitchen, to craft a recipe for a better life.

Oct. 20, 2022

Jay Gray reports for NBC Nightly News in this video:

https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/video/san-francisco-nonprofit-helping-chefs-in-need-to-build-their-own-businesses-151187013820

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I loved the shot of 1950’s-style “boring American food!” As a “child of the 50’s,” so true! Also, reaffirms the “food-based approach” to promoting social justice!

Heck, I remember from my days at the BIA that the best way to get folks to show up for a meeting or event and be in a good mood to participate was to “put out the food.” I used to bring bagels to BIA en banc conferences. It often helped “lighten the mood,” even if it didn’t garner me enough votes to win very many of my “en banc legal battles!”

Some things that stand out:

  • Teamwork, skill, and cooperation;
  • The power of immigrant women;
  • Diversity and variety improving American food;
  • Investment in “human capital;”
  • Self-sufficiency;
  • Jobs and education for others;
  • Teaching and training for success.

I think there are “messages” here about the benefits of immigrants and how many of those arriving at our borders could be successfully integrated into, energize, and expand opportunities in communities in need throughout America.

For example, almost everyone agrees that there is a shortage of affordable, livable, attractive housing that is adversely affecting communities around the U.S. Why not invest in the hard work, creativity, skills, and initiative of arriving migrants to help address these problems and make life better for everyone? Expand the economy, expand the tax base, raise wages, solve problems, revitalize “hurting” communities! Decent jobs with a future and homes in the community might also help address the opioid and other substance abuse problems in many areas.

Rather than squandering money and resources on “sure to ultimately fail” “deterrence” strategies and counterproductive restrictions, detentions, and deportations, why not think about ways to 1) recognize the realities of human migration; and 2) harness and direct the undeniable power of that migration for everyone’s benefit?

Leaders of both parties seem “willfully blind” to the realities and benefits of migration in the 21st century. Could public-private partnerships be part of the answer? There must be some more “humane pragmatists” out here who are interested in actually solving problems, building on diversity, and doing things for the common good.

One promising initiative, brought to my attention by my long-time friend and former colleague Lori Scialabba, Specialist Executive at Deloitte Consulting, LLP, is Deloitte US’s recently announced “$1.5 Billion Social Impact Investment to Foster a More Equitable Society.” Read about it here: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/deloitte-us-announces-1-5-billion-social-impact-investment-to-foster-a-more-equitable-society-301633710.html.

Lori L. Scialabba
Lori L. Scialabba
Specialist Executive
Deloitte Consulting LLP
PHOTO: Deloitte

(Historical Footnote: I helped recruit Lori for the Honors Program when I was the Deputy General Counsel of the “Legacy INS.” Later, we were both BIA Members. Lori was one of my Vice Chairs — along with Mary Maguire Dunne — and eventually succeeded me as Chair before going on to a distinguished career as a Senior Executive at USCIS and then Deloitte.)

And, of course, we can and should build upon the extraordinary success of “our own” DMV immigrant entrepreneur Tea Ivanovic and her team over at Immigrant Food. Tea exemplifies the “power of food” and its fundamental connection to immigration, diversity, economic vitality, and social justice! I highlighted Tea’s success in a recent “Courtside” profile: https://immigrationcourtside.com/2022/09/10/🇺🇸🗽👍🏼-immigrant-nation-teas-truth-wisdom-americans-views-on-immigrants-and-immigration-are-overwhelmingly-positive/.

Tea Ivanovic
Tea Ivanovic
Director of Communications & Outreach
Immigrant Food
PHOTO: Immigrant Food

Congrats to the folks at La Cocina and to NBC News for featuring this great, thought-provoking, story!

🇺🇸Due Process Forever!

PWS

10-21-22

⚖️NYDN OP-ED: Ending Abortion Will Hurt Refugee Women!☹️

Eliana Weinstein
Eliana Weinstein
research assistant in the department of anesthesiology at Weill Cornell Medicine
PHOTO: Cornell
Professor Stephen Yale-Loehr
Professor Stephen Yale-Loehr
Cornell Law

By ELIANA WEINSTEIN and STEPHEN YALE-LOEHR, NEW YORK DAILY NEWS |

APR 20, 2022 AT 5:00 AM

https://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/ny-oped-supreme-court-refugee-abortion-20220420-iyjrkcorjndk5gpxads5qzi4z4-story.html

. . . .

Abortion bans have far-reaching consequences. Within the first 30 days of the enactment of the Texas abortion ban last September, the state saw a 60% decline in abortions. Refugees — who are disproportionately represented in southern states along the U.S. border — are among the most endangered groups. These individuals face imminent danger, violence or persecution in their home country.

Due to inherent instability, refugees are especially vulnerable to sex trafficking along the migration journey. The fear of deportation, lack of immigration status, lower educational attainment, inability to speak English and unfamiliarity with U.S. employment protections mark them as targets. Immigrant women make up 80% of sex-trafficked individuals in the United States.

The glaring omission of exceptions for rape or incest under the Texas law is disturbing. An estimated 5% of rapes among victims of reproductive age result in pregnancy, which by one estimate amounts to 32,000 rape-related pregnancies each year in the United States. The six-week mark under the Texas law allows a maximum buffer of two weeks from the time a pregnant woman misses her period, the first sign of pregnancy. In a third of rape-related pregnancy cases, victims do not discover they are pregnant until the second trimester, 13 weeks into the pregnancy.

. . . .

The shadow of the forthcoming Supreme Court decision lies at the intersection of human rights, law, and medicine. Abortion transcends partisan politics, with far-reaching consequences for women, children, healthcare providers, and all tax-paying citizens.

Rather than prioritize the life of an unborn child, our country must consider the lives that will be forever altered by a birth into desperate circumstances. States should enact protections for groups that will be most vulnerable, including victims of assault or rape, sex-trafficked individuals, and refugees. By defending our nation’s most vulnerable, we would see substantial benefits to the nation as a whole.

Weinstein is a research assistant in the department of anesthesiology at Weill Cornell Medicine. Yale-Loehr is an immigration professor at Cornell Law School.

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Read the full op-ed at the link.

But, as some of my NDPA colleagues would say, isn’t cruelty and hurting refugee women of color the point of the far right’s war on abortion?

It’s certainly not about the welfare of children and women for which they care not a fig. See, e.g., vicious attacks on vulnerable LGBTQ kids and their families; end of child tax credits; child separtion; unrepresented kids in Immigration Court; making “White kids feel good” at the expense of their minority classmates; seeking to circumvent protections for unaccompanied minors at the border; disparaging statements calling U.S. citizens “anchor babies,” etc.

Ironically, children of migrant women are considered by the GOP to be “persons” as long as they are in the womb. Once they are born, they become “nonpersons” with few if any rights that Repubs are willing to recognize. 

If they could (and that might be next), they would strip kids of undocumented parentage of citizenship. Who says today’s Supremes wouldn’t go along? Having a class of “nonpersons” makes their job easier. No rights, no problems for righty judges and right wing politicos!

Sound familiar?  It should? See Dred Scott. 

🇺🇸Due Process Forever!

PWS

04-20-22

🇺🇸⚖️🗽😎SUPPORT ASYLUMWORKS: Give A  Mother’s Day “Gift of Goodness” that Supports Asylum-Seeking Moms!

AsylumWorks

AsylumWorks

Joan Hodges Wu
Joan Hodges Wu
Founder & Executive Director
AsylumWorks

A  Mother’s Day “Gift of Goodness” that Supports Asylum-Seeking Moms

For an entire year, COVID-19 has disrupted work and home life and moms have been stretched so thin – acting as caregivers, teachers, and earners, often all at the same time. 

Asylum-seeking moms have been particularly impacted. After overcoming tremendous obstacles to be reunited with their children or to bring their families to safety, these women are now forced to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic without the support network of extended family or friends. With the rise of xenophobia and the slumping of the U.S. economy, many asylum-seeking mothers and families have been forced into isolation and destitution – ineligible to receive government assistance while they wait for the backlog of asylum claims to be processed. 

As many of us know, when asylum seekers are unable to meet their basic needs, they often struggle to retain or work with legal representation. It can be hard to focus on writing a personal statement or gathering evidence when you don’t know where your next paycheck will come from or how you will put food on the table for your children.

That is where nonprofit organizations, like AsylumWorks, come in. Founded in 2016 by a frustrated social worker who saw underlying gaps in assistance for asylum seekers,  AsylumWorks provides asylum seekers and their families with holistic services and support to complement the work of legal representation. In 2020 alone, AsylumWorks served over 370 asylum seekers – providing trauma-informed social services, employment assistance, and community building to help asylum seekers rebuild their lives with dignity and purpose. Because they work to connect asylum seekers to a network of support, their clients are dramatically more likely to win their asylum cases. 

This year, AsylumWorks wants to celebrate and support mothers and caregivers in the asylum-seeking community who have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19. That’s why they’ve recently launched a Mother’s Day Campaign in collaboration with Immigrant Food (a cause-casual restaurant in DC). Their “gifts of goodness” can be purchased and sent to a mother in your life or donated to one of the hundreds of asylum-seeking moms they work with. 

Funds raised will go directly to supporting holistic, trauma-informed programs for asylum-seekers like Berhanu, a 38-year-old Ethiopian mother and political activist. After being beaten within inches of her life, a pregnant Berhanu fled her country to seek asylum in the United States. Upon arrival, she found herself alone with a newborn son, struggling to navigate a new country, a global pandemic, and a complicated legal system. Working together, AsylumWorks brought Berhanu into their employment program to re-enter the workforce, connected her with a doctor to treat her son’s medical condition, and referred her to a private immigration firm that agreed to give her a generous client discount. Berhanu and her son are now stable and live in Virginia. Despite COVID-19, they continue to attend AsylumWorks’s virtual community-building events to meet new friends as they await their pending cases.  

Berahu is one of the hundreds of thousands of asylum-seeking mothers who deserve to feel seen and appreciated this Mother’s Day. If you are moved by the work of AsylumWorks, consider purchasing one of these unique gifts of goodness. Pre-orders are available throughout the month of April. For more information, or to purchase a gift of goodness, please visit https: //www.mothersday.asylumworks.org/

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Great organization; great cause!

And, speaking of “women who move us forward and inspire us,” Joan Hodges Wu and her friend and colleague Professor Lindsay Muir Harris of UDC are certainly two of the most notable in that category! Thanks for all you do, my friends!

Professor Lindsay Muir Harris
Professor Lindsay Muir Harris
UDC Law

 

Due Process Forever!🇺🇸⚖️🗽

PWS

04-14-21