Trump's cruel ban impacts moms and kids here in the US
By Jody Mashek
In the Trump regime's eyes, this is one less threat. |
Legal
challenges to Donald Trump’s “Muslim ban” are mounting.
Federal
judges have suspended the order, which blocks immigration from seven
Muslim-majority countries and suspends refugee settlement from everywhere,
while federal cases wind their way through the courts.
Meanwhile,
confusion and uncertainty continue. I’ve seen it firsthand.
I’m
a legal director for the American Friends Service Committee, which means I
regularly work with Muslim families on their immigration cases.
My heart is
breaking from the stories I’ve heard from children worried that their families
will be split up, and from parents in the U.S. who are trying to bring their
children here.
To
be clear, this ban applies to kids, too.
After
a five-year old was detained at Washington’s Dulles airport, White House Press
Secretary Sean Spicer had the audacity to defend the practice of targeting
children.
“To assume that just because of someone’s age or gender or whatever
that they don’t pose a threat would be misguided and wrong,” he claimed.
Rumors
and misinformation were percolating across immigrant communities before the ban
was even signed.
One
day, I heard some kids wondering which members of their family would be
deported. Their extended family is from an African country, and all are
citizens or legal permanent residents. Unless one of them commits a deportable
offense or the ban is expanded exponentially, they’re all going to remain in
the United States.
When
I told them this, they started jumping up and down out of happiness and
relief. But those kids were in fourth and first grade. No kids that
young should ever have to have this kind of conversation.
But
I also work with people whose lives may be irrevocably changed by the ban.
I
have clients from Somalia and Iraq in particular who are trying to get their
children to the U.S., and I’m worried about them. Even before the ban, they
expressed concern about how long it would take to get their kids here with
them. And now they could wait even longer, with no guarantee that their day
will ever come.
The
process was already a long one, because all migrants and refugees are subjected
to rigorous vetting — despite what we’re being told about the current vetting
being insufficient.
These
families’ cases have been in process for two years or longer. They’re trying to
bring their children as “follow-to-join” refugees, which is a process that
Trump’s order suspended for at least four months. And that four-month stoppage
could in reality create years of delays.
Because
the children are Iraqi and Somali — both countries on the “ban” list — I’m
deeply concerned about what will happen.
When
I talked to the Somali mom, I felt physically ill telling her that I don’t know
how long it will take for her children to come to the U.S. I can’t really
describe the sheer desperation and sense of defeat I saw in her.
I’m
scared that she’ll throw everything away here and return to her family in a
refugee camp abroad. I’ve had distressingly similar conversations with other
parents, too.
The
biggest ray of hope comes from the hundreds of thousands of people across the
country who’ve taken to the streets, written letters, and called their
representatives to assert loudly and clearly that refugees should be welcomed.
I
hope that those in power — and everyone who has a role in carrying out these
decisions — will hear their plea for humanity. The ban must be ended.
Jody
Mashek directs legal services for the American Friends Service Committee’s
Immigrants Voice Program in Des Moines. Distributed by
OtherWords.org.