Gulf News

America’s soul as nation of immigrants is in peril

By repealing Daca, the Trump administra­tion seems resolved to harden the hearts of Americans, pitting needlessly one against another

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he Trump administra­tion appears determined to kill off the idea of the United States as a land of promise, opportunit­y and equality for all. With a stroke of his pen, the president has potentiall­y exiled hundreds of thousands of young people in the United States to a life in the shadows. Their crime? Coming to America as children.

The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) programme — which Trump ended on September 5 — offered temporary reprieve from deportatio­n to nearly 800,000 unauthoris­ed immigrants who entered this country before the age of 16. By repealing it, Trump and his administra­tion sent a signal that they are dead set on deporting not only Daca recipients but the American Dream itself. I would be infuriated if I weren’t so sad.

For those currently benefiting from the programme, this decision will mean the inability to open a bank account, the fear of riding public transporta­tion lest they be stopped by the authoritie­s, the difficulty of renting an apartment without showing their tax returns, the impossibil­ity of holding a legal job. Daca recipients can do all of those things now. Soon, they will be living lives of deliberate social and economic marginalis­ation.

While it’s true that Trump has punted his decision to Congress, which now has six months to decide the fate of these young people, it’s just as true that Congress, that graveyard of common-sense reform, has already proven itself unable to solve this quandary. It was because of Congress’s failure, after all, that Obama crafted the programme to begin with.

By repealing this protection when no alternativ­e is in place, the Trump administra­tion seems resolved to harden the hearts of Americans, pitting us needlessly against one another while jackhammer­ing at the cement that desperatel­y holds our nation together. Trump’s policies depress me to no end, but what bothers me most is not these efforts. What distresses me most is when they succeed in tearing us apart. From its inception under Obama, Daca has left undocument­ed minors far too vulnerable.

The war on terror produces so much blanket suspicion on all things Muslim that earlier this year we were actually arguing about whether we should let Muslim grandmothe­rs into the country. Think about that for a moment.

The United States also has a confused sense of how receptive it is to refugees. While the US was the top country for refugee resettleme­nt in 2016, the US public has for the last 60 years generally opposed welcoming refugees, regardless of whether they’re from Hungary, Indochina, Cuba or Syria.

And perhaps most relevant of all, too many Americans believe the myth that their ancestors entered “legally” while so many of today’s immigrants enter “illegally.” Well, the truth is not so simple.

Until the 1920s, Europeans who came to the United States could just show up, without a visa, and were generally admitted.

After the 1920s, there were also relatively easy avenues available to people to adjust their status while remaining in the country, even if they had entered without authorisat­ion. Those possibilit­ies basically ended in 1965, and the consequenc­e of this change has directly fed our current immigratio­n challenges.

I, too, am an immigrant to this country. I have been fingerprin­ted, questioned and held at its borders. I’ve been through its byzantine immigratio­n process, and I have survived it all to find a mostly welcoming nation on the other side.

In my capacity as a writer, I’ve had the good fortune to travel all over this country, and I’ve always been impressed with the authentic generosity and warm hospitalit­y of Americans when you meet them in person. Yet, I’ve also been struck by the seemingly endless need in the American character to punish abstract others, both foreign and domestic. Ending Daca is one of these cases.

We have choices as to the type of nation we want to be. Are we a welcoming people who prize compassion and enable opportunit­y, or are we a country that sees threats everywhere and is constantly poised to respond with damnable cruelty?

The Trump administra­tion continues to pull us toward the crueller aspects of our character. I suspect they see this as a way of shoring up their diminishin­g support. But we, the people, can’t succumb to such disgracefu­l entreaties.

They’re trying not to lose their base. We, on the other hand, must do everything we can not to lose the soul of this proud immigrant nation.

Moustafa Bayoumi is the author of How Does It Feel To Be a Problem?: Being Young and Arab in America.

 ??  ?? Americans must stand with the ‘dreamers’ Obama slams Trump amnesty move
Americans must stand with the ‘dreamers’ Obama slams Trump amnesty move

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