The Mercury News

Aiming to empower region’s undocument­ed LGBTQ

Speakers at Santa Clara County conference discuss feeling unaccepted in the U.S. and by their families

- By Tatiana Sanchez and Kristin Lam Staff writers

As an undocument­ed Latino kid, David Campos thought there would never be a place for him in the United States. He also thought his parents would never come to terms with his sexual orientatio­n.

There are thousands whose experience­s mirror what Campos went through when he was younger, trying to navigate through life feeling unaccepted in the country and by their own families.

“At least as an undocument­ed person, you have your family that’s also in the same situation,” Campos said. “But when you inject the sexual orientatio­n or the gender identity piece, that means that you could actually potentiall­y lose the most basic support you have which is the people in your family who love you. You kind of live with this really real fear because you kind of get it from both ends.”

Campos eventually became a citizen and his family came to embrace his sexual orientatio­n, and he is now a deputy county executive. Friday, he gave the welcoming address to Santa Clara County’s first conference on discrimina­tion the local LGBT undocument­ed community faces

as they continue to experience challenges from income instabilit­y to lack of health care services — a population dubbed “undocuquee­r.”

There are more than 267,000 undocument­ed LGBT immigrant adults — about 2.7 percent of the undocument­ed population — living in the U.S, according to the latest data from the Williams Institute at UCLA. Many escaped violence, poverty and discrimina­tion in their home country, only to find themselves facing new challenges —

from lack of health care services to job insecurity — in the U.S.

The Santa Clara County Office of LGBTQ Affairs and the UndocuSpar­tan Student Resource Center held the Empowered Undocuquee­r Leaders Conference on Friday at San Jose State to promote inclusivit­y, create positive visibility and provide resources.

Undocuquee­r, according to event organizer Kevin Gaytan, originated in the early 2000s in the Los Angeles area. Born in Zacatecas, Mexico, his

mom brought him to the U.S. at age 5. He grew up in east San Jose and became “DACA-mented” in 2012 when the program was incepted.

Gaytan, now 24, came out to his supportive mom as gay three years ago. He said identifyin­g as undocuquee­r is empowering.

“I use the term undocuquee­r to express my multiple identities in one comprehens­ive term,” Gaytan said. “I use undocuquee­r to represent my immigratio­n status as being undocument­ed. I used the word queer to represent my identity as a gay man. And in general always representi­ng that I come from a minority, but also understand­ing that it’s a powerful minority.”

The “New America” fellowship, a Santa Clara County program that places DACA recipients in jobs throughout the county as a way to give them profession­al opportunit­ies and resources, assigned him to the county’s Office of LGBTQ Affairs.

Through his research on the undocuquee­r population and the many disparitie­s they face, he found that this population faces obstacles, from housing insecurity to employment discrimina­tion. He added members of the community unequal treatment in schools and the healthcare system.

That sparked the desire to host a conference to empower the undocument­ed LGBT community. Gaytan said he hopes Santa Clara County continues to host the undocuquee­r conference annually with different themes.

About 30 people, representa­tives from community organizati­ons and allies, attended Friday’s conference. Workshops covered how to support undocuquee­r individual­s by discussing rights, identity, healing and local resources.

Yosimar Reyes, artist-inresidenc­e at the media and culture organizati­on Define America and the conference’s keynote speaker, discussed immigratio­n policy in his workshop. The 29-year-old undocument­ed queer Mexican immigrant and Los Angeles resident said he focuses on telling uplifting stories through poetry.

Reyes said he is amazed by how undocument­ed queer people have created their own subculture that they identify with, gain strength from and celebrate.

Other than the organizers and speakers, however, no other attendees publicly identified as both undocument­ed and queer.

Jocelynn Mijangos, a 17-year-old San Jose resident who identifies as bisexual and Mexican-American, said an undocuquee­r friend of hers was looking forward to attending the conference. But Friday morning, the friend told her he couldn’t join her because his parents asked too many questions about why he wanted to go. He isn’t out to his parents and feared they would find out about his sexuality.

“I was like, ‘Don’t worry then, it’s fine, it’s fine,’ ” Mijangos said. “‘You don’t have to go. If anything I’ll tell you everything that’s going on. I’ll help you out, don’t worry. Just take care of yourself first.’ ”

 ?? PHOTO BY KRISTIN LAM ?? County of Santa Clara Deputy County Executive David Campos gives one of the welcoming addresses at the Undocuquee­r Conference on Friday at San Jose State University.
PHOTO BY KRISTIN LAM County of Santa Clara Deputy County Executive David Campos gives one of the welcoming addresses at the Undocuquee­r Conference on Friday at San Jose State University.

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