Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago immigrants relieved not to be “scapegoat” anymore.

- BY ELVIA MALAGÓN, STAFF REPORTER emalagon@suntimes.com | @elviamalag­on Elvia Malagón’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

For the past five years, Fernando Gutierrez has felt like the Trump administra­tion used immigrants like him as a “bogeyman” to advance its agenda.

“I’m a special ed teacher, I’m gay and I was born in Mexico,” Gutierrez said. “It felt like for the last five years — that’s how long Trump became relevant — he just used people like me as a scapegoat for his agenda.”

On Wednesday, Gutierrez, 41, took the day off from work and wrapped his arms around his husband and cried as they watched Joe Biden get sworn in as president from their South Loop living room.

“So surreal,” Gutierrez said as he stood in front of the television.

Soon Gutierrez and his husband, Matt Schreck, celebrated by standing on their balcony, waiving rainbow American and Mexican flags while blasting Miley Cyrus’ “Party in the U.S.A.”

“Relieved,” Gutierrez said after the inaugurati­on. “Because there are so many people in the communitie­s I interact with that won’t be a scapegoat anymore for the president of the United States.”

After four years of hard-line immigratio­n policies, some immigrants like Gutierrez are hopeful the new Biden administra­tion will bring relief to these communitie­s. Biden walks into the White House promising to create a pathway to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed immigrants living in the U.S. In Illinois, that could alter the lives of the estimated 437,000 undocument­ed immigrants living in the state, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

Advocates see Biden’s inaugurati­on as a critical moment for immigratio­n reform after years of failed attempts, said Dulce Ortiz, the executive director of Mano a Mano Family Resource Center, which provides services to immigrant communitie­s in suburban Lake and McHenry counties. Ortiz said organizati­ons plan to push for as many people to be included in the relief, hoping to end the narrative that only “good” immigrants should obtain legal status.

“We need to do away with those types of frameworks,” Ortiz said. “It does leave several of our brothers and sisters behind. We have individual­s who have been here 20-plus years and don’t have a pathway for citizenshi­p. Maybe they did make mistakes; they should not be punished for the rest of their lives.”

Gutierrez came to the U.S. from Mexico in his 20s after his father was able to obtain amnesty in the 1980s. He became a U.S. citizen about a month after Trump’s inaugurati­on and voted in a presidenti­al election for the first time last year.

He also would like Biden to tackle immigratio­n reform, thinking not just of his family but of the families in Back of the Yards where he works.

“I know there are a lot of families who are very hopeful because they will have a chance to have a normal life instead of being targeted,” Gutierrez said.

He will also be looking at Biden to increase access to vaccinatio­ns, especially because he’s expected to return to his classroom next month. And as someone in the LGBTQ community, Gutierrez said he’s concerned about what appears to be more ramped-up discrimina­tion after years of progress.

“It was very scary for us that [Trump] would win again,” Gutierrez said, who was one of the same-sex couples married in Milwaukee in 2014.

Ali Sharifi Tarokh, 35, of West Ridge, felt so insecure about his accent and name during the Trump era that he changed his name when he became a naturalize­d citizen. Tarokh, a refugee from Iran who arrived in the U.S. in 2012, was able to vote for president for the first time last year.

And while he didn’t experience any harassment, the fear of being questioned because of his identity stayed with him, especially when he traveled outside of Chicago.

“[Trump] reminded us that the shadow of fascism is always close to us,” he said. “And we have to watch our democracy every day.”

He had goose bumps Wednesday morning just thinking about the inaugurati­on and the change in leadership. He watched the ceremony from his job and felt a sigh of relief.

“It was great to see some dignity to our nation,” he said.

While Ortiz and other advocates plan to hold the Biden administra­tion accountabl­e for promises made to immigrant communitie­s, she felt hopeful while watching the ceremony from work. It was a sharp contrast to the devastatio­n she felt four years ago.

“Today, it was like a moment where I could finally breathe,” she said.

“[TRUMP] REMINDED US THAT THE SHADOW OF FASCISM IS ALWAYS CLOSE TO US. AND WE HAVE TO WATCH OUR DEMOCRACY EVERY DAY.”

ALI SHARIFI TAROKH, 35, West Ridge

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 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? ABOVE: Matt Schreck, 43, and his husband, Fernando Gutierrez, 41, embrace Wedneday as they watch the inaugurati­on ceremony for President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris from their South Loop home. RIGHT: They cheer and wave rainbow American and Mexican flags on their balcony.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ABOVE: Matt Schreck, 43, and his husband, Fernando Gutierrez, 41, embrace Wedneday as they watch the inaugurati­on ceremony for President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris from their South Loop home. RIGHT: They cheer and wave rainbow American and Mexican flags on their balcony.

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