May 17, 2012

Standing with DREAMers

Yesterday I sat in the Senate Gallery in the U.S. Capitol with about a hundred immigrant youths to show my support for and solidarity with these DREAMers. And sitting with them, hands clasped, heads bowed, lips praying, the reality of their situation hit home to me. These young people, brought to the United States as minors, had known no other home than America and wanted nothing more than to serve and contribute openly for the good of the country. And this morning, that occasion, was more than just a vote for them, more than just the raising or dropping of an index finger to signify approval or disapproval. This morning’s vote was about the very lives and livelihoods of the approximately 800,000 undocumented young people who would benefit from the DREAM Act.

This morning was what I needed: a reminder that the work that we do in seeking to live out the gospel’s demands of justice, of speaking up for the marginalized and voiceless, and of welcoming the stranger, really does matter.

Moving forward, the words of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Theodore Parker echo in my head: “The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.”

I have faith that justice will be served for these young people, that they will be afforded the chance to contribute and live lives out of the shadows. I have faith because justice is at the very heart of God, because the defense of those who are marginalized and oppressed is always the right thing to do. I have faith because American progress, though often slow and tortuous, continues to rumble forward, and comprehensive immigration reform–including the DREAM Act–that demolishes and defeats xenophobic rhetoric and anti-immigrant fear mongering will have its day.

And it will come soon. Not as soon as we would like, perhaps. But soon.

[Praying with the DREAMers after the vote.]

Akaka Reintroduces Filipino Veterans Family Reunification Act

The below is a reprint of the original press release.
Senator Daniel Kahikina Akaka

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Daniel K. Akaka (D-Hawaii) reintroduced a bill today to reunite Filipino World War II veterans who are U.S. citizens and U.S. residents with their children in the Philippines who have languished for years on the visa waiting list. The Filipino Veterans Family Reunification Act of 2009 is cosponsored by Senators Daniel K. Inouye (D-Hawaii), Edward M. Kennedy (D-Massachusetts), and Maria Cantwell (D-Washington).

“In seeking an exemption from the numerical limitation on immigrant visas for the children of the Filipino veterans, our bill will address and resolve an issue rooted in a set of historical circumstances that are now nearly seven-decades old,” Senator Akaka said. “It does not require any appropriation and will serve to reunite these veterans with their children and honor their too-long-forgotten World War II service to this nation.”

Of the 30,000 surviving Filipino World War II veterans, 7,000 are U.S. citizens and reside in this country. Many filed visa petitions for their children, who remained in the Philippines. Now in their 80s and 90s, these men continue to wait for their children, who languish on the visa waiting lists, to join them. This legislation exempts the veterans’ children, about 20,000 individual in all, from the numerical limitation on immigrant visas.

HISTORY OF FILIPINO WWII VETERANS
In 1941, over 200,000 Filipinos were drafted into the United States armed forces and served honorably during World War II. In 1946, Congress passed the Rescissions Act, which authorized a $200 million appropriation to the Commonwealth Army of the Philippines conditioned on a provision that service in the Commonwealth Army of the Phillippines should not be deemed to have been service in the active military or air service of the United States.

It would take Congress more than four decades to acknowledge that the Filipino World War II veterans had, indeed, served in the U.S. armed forces. The Immigration Act of 1990 included a provision that offered the opportunity to obtain U.S. citizenship. And nineteen years later, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 included a provision that authorized the payment of benefits to the 30,000 surviving Filipino veterans in the amount of $15,000 for those who are citizens and $9,000 for those who are non-citizens.