Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Understand­ing the true value of the American spirit

- Cokie and Steve Roberts

Here’s an issue that’s not getting nearly enough attention: President Trump’s assault on refugees. Not only is it bad public policy, it’s a deeply immoral violation of the country’s most basic values.

The refugee issue has been largely overshadow­ed by Trump’s inflammato­ry attempt to bar travelers from six Muslim-majority nations — a plan that was partly upheld by the Supreme Court. Barely noticed was the court’s decision to sustain Trump’s order blocking all refugees for 120 days and limiting America’s annual intake to 50,000.

Immigratio­n lawyers think they can loosen those strictures by arguing that some refugees have “bona fide” attachment­s, in the court’s language, to American relatives and institutio­ns. But the bottom line is clear: At a time when the global refugee crisis is worse than ever, Trump is trashing the American tradition of welcoming the world’s most vulnerable outcasts.

“The court’s ruling will leave refugees stranded in difficult and dangerous situations abroad,” said Hardy Vieux, legal director of the pro-refugee organizati­on Human Rights First, to the New York Times. “Many of these individual­s may not have ‘bona fide relationsh­ips,’ but have strong reasons to look to the United States for protection.”

The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees documents the extent of this crisis. More than 65 million people worldwide have been forced from their homes. More than 22 million are classified as refugees, meaning they’ve crossed internatio­nal boundaries seeking sanctuary. More than half of those refugees are children.

“The willingnes­s of nations to work together, not just for refugees but for the collective human interest, is what’s being tested today,” says Filippo Grandi, the UN’s chief refugee official.

The Obama administra­tion was slow to meet that test, but greatly accelerate­d its efforts to help refugees during its last months in office.

Trump insists his policy protects national security. “We must keep America SAFE,” he tweeted after the court decision. But there is no evidence — absolutely none — to support his claim that refugees pose a threat to the country’s safety.

Trump is flat-out wrong. Refugees are a benefit to the country, not a threat. A new report by the think tank New American Economy says that refugees earned more than $77 billion in household income in 2015 and paid almost $21 billion in taxes. “Rather than a drain on communitie­s, the high rate of labor force participat­ion of refugees and their spirit of entreprene­urship instead sustains and strengthen­s their hometowns,” said the report.

A final point: The process of resettling refugees reflects the American virtue of community self-help at its very best. Local volunteers, most belonging to faith-based organizati­ons, provide these refugee families with their basic needs, from jobs and rides to groceries and apartments.

In Bethesda, Maryland, three different congregati­ons — Presbyteri­an, Jewish and Muslim — jointly sponsored a refugee family from Afghanista­n and raised money to support them for a year.

“We got pro bono help for them with medical, dental and housing,” says Rabbi Sunny Schnitzer of the Bethesda Jewish Congregati­on. “We have 90 members between the three congregati­ons that came together to work on this project.”

Hamdi Ulukaya, an immigrant from Turkey, founded the highly successful Chobani yogurt business in upstate New York and employs many refugees.

“The minute they get a job, that’s the minute they stop being refugees,” Ulukaya told “60 Minutes.” “They are the most loyal, hard-working people ... in our plant here.”

As we prepare to celebrate our nation’s birthday, there’s no doubt that Ulukaya understand­s the true spirit of America a lot better than Donald Trump.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States