Monday, November 23, 2009

Oracion del Campesino en la Lucha

- Cesar Chavez

Show me the suffering of the most miserable;
So I will know my people's plight.
Free me to pray for others;
For you are present in every person.
Help me to take responsibility for my own life;
So that I can be free at last.
Grant me the courage to serve others;
For in service there is true life.
Give me honesty and patience;
So that I can work with other workers.
Bring forth song and celebration;
So that the Spirit will be alive among us.
Let the Spirit flourish and grow;
So that we will never tire of the struggle.
Let us remember those who have died for justice;
For they have given us life.
Help us love even those who hate us;
So we can change the world.

Amen.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Two Worlds

This is now...


That was then...

Two Worlds

That was then...

And this is now. Two different worlds, no?

A November Reflection

I've been reflecting on the extreme differences between my present day reality, and that of, say, six or nine months ago. There are some pretty stark contrasts. I will try not to make judgments about the relative value of what I was doing then versus what I am doing today, or my happiness and sense of fulfillment then, as opposed to today. I believe that all of the experiences I've had over the past 28 years have taught me different things. I have also always had joy and many, many things to be thankful for at every point in my life thus far. Life in the desert, and in Tucson has it challenges, to be sure, but it's been a long time since I felt as passionately about the work I am doing, or felt so strongly that this is where I should and need to be. As a man I sat with in the desert for a little while a few weeks ago told me, Dios es grande. God is great. Amen.


Arivaca Road, as the sun is coming up

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Yesterday

Roberto was sitting by the side of Ruby Road. We sat and talked for a little while, trying to figure out what he wanted to do. He had been walking for 7 days. His guide had left him behind the day before. The nights were so cold. He hadn’t eaten in 3 days. He was diabetic. He had been in Mexico for two years now, but his wife and children and grandchildren were all in Phoenix. He wanted to be with his grandchildren. He sighed deeply several times as we talked. Finally, he decided that he wanted us to call Border Patrol. I double checked that this was his wish, “¿seguro que eso es lo que quiere? porque no queremos hacerlo si no es lo que quiere usted.” (Are you sure that is what you want? because we don’t want to unless you want us to). He looked right into my eyes, “pues, no es lo que quiero, pero es lo que tengo que hacer.” (It’s not what I want, but it’s what I have to do). Earlier, he had asked why we couldn’t give him a ride somewhere and I explained that it was against the law and there would be serious consequences for us. He said, so simply, ¿porqué? Why? So many thoughts went through my head. What a logical question. It is something I want to ask so often. Porqué, why is it against the law to provide a safe resting place to someone who is exhausted with pain and suffering and disappointed hopes? Porqué, why is it that we live in a country that allows the death of thousands of men, women, and children who are struggling for nothing more than work, to reunite with family members, an escape from poverty and oppression? I cannot answer these questions in a way that makes any sense. Roberto told me as we sat that there God is with everyone. Not only with those who are good, but with those who are bad and who do bad things as well. Dios es grande, Roberto said to me, God is great.
We heard the crunch of gravel on tires as the agent pulled up, and Roberto, looking into my eyes again, said softly, “No pasa nada.” It’s okay. “No pongas triste.” Don’t be sad. This man who had suffered so much was concerned with the well-being of others, was concerned that I would be sad at his suffering. I smiled with him, took his hand and said goodbye, qué Dios le bendiga y cuidase mucho. The agent, whose Spanish was not very good, asked him if he had any “cosas malas” (bad things) on him, meaning weapons. “Solo hambre,” was his response. Only hunger.
A few hours later, as we drove out Arivaca Road, we passed a woman standing by herself, framed from behind by the most amazing sunset I have seen in a long time. I turned around and pulled the car up next to her to ask if she was okay. She was lost, and was waiting for a ride. Her name was Yulisa and she was from Michoacán. This was her second attempt in the past week, she had already been caught by Border Patrol and deported once. This time she had been walking for three days. Her husband had left her and she had two children that she needed to provide for. There wasn’t work back home, so she was coming to find a job in the U.S. Could we give her a ride? Couldn’t we just drop her off before the checkpoint, and pick her up after? We explained the reality of the situation to her. We waited with her for Border Patrol. She asked where we were from, where we were going. To Tucson. Her destination. Or it was, now she was going back to Mexico, to Nogales if she was lucky. Or she could be processed through Operation Streamline, meaning that she would be one of the unlucky seventy people who are selected each day in this sector to spend a few days in jail before appearing, shackled at the feet and hands, before a judge in the federal courthouse in Tucson, charged with entering the country without permission, given a permanent criminal record, and warned that if they attempt entry again, they will be given a harsher jail sentence. All this would mean more time before Yulisa could either work and start sending money to her children, or return to be with them. Or she might be “laterally repatriated,” that is, deported to a location far away from where she had attempted to enter, Tijuana, perhaps, or somewhere in Texas. This means that someone like Yulisa, who is exhausted after days of walking in the desert and probably without any money, is dumped in a distant location where they have most likely never been and have no connections. This is intended to deter them from attempting to cross again.
One border patrol truck passed us by without stopping as we sat there. As a second one sped past, we shouted and Yulisa gave an ear-piercing whistle that made the agent turn around and pull up next to us. It was pitch dark as he opened the door and she climbed inside. We waited until he had finished questioning her, filling out paperwork, radioing in, a good twenty minutes. Then he pulled away, north towards Tucson, and we followed.

When it was still summertime...


Thank God for coffee!