The Day

DACA allowed me to pursue my dreams

As DACA faces continuous attacks from Republican­s, I feel an immense duty to continue helping make real change for communitie­s like ours.

- Michelle Villegas Tapia is a political strategist. She is the Latino coalitions director at the Democratic National Committee and lives in Washington, but she will always call Chicago home. By MICHELLE VILLEGAS TAPIA

This first appeared in the Chicago Tribune:

Iwas a Dreamer for many years, and this month marks the 11th anniversar­y of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. I want to honor all of the young people like me who were given the opportunit­y to pursue their dreams thanks to this program and assure you that Democrats will continue to fight for you, for us, so that we can continue dreaming.

When I was 2 years old, my parents left their home in Guadalajar­a, Mexico, in pursuit of work and a brighter future for our little family in America. We moved to Chicago in November 1995. It was a brutal winter with unpreceden­ted amounts of snow, but each day, we would walk to catch the early morning bus, with me bundled up inside my dad’s coat, so my parents could make it to work and save enough money to buy a car.

Pretty quickly, my parents realized they weren’t going to make it in America without someone who could care for me while they were at work. Child care costs weren’t something they could afford as new immigrants, but working less wasn’t an option either. So, three months into our new adventure, my abuelita Martha, my maternal grandmothe­r, uprooted her life and joined us in Chicago. My abuelita filled my life with joy — and stability. We would stay tucked in bed watching “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” as my parents left for work every day. She made my lunch, did my hair, walked me to school and made a home-cooked dinner from scratch every night.

The United States was good to us. I learned English, my dad got a good union job with the Teamsters and my mom started a small business. Chicago became home, and so we stayed and looked toward the future.

For a long time, it didn’t occur to me that being undocument­ed made me different. It really wasn’t until high school, when I wasn’t eligible to get a driver’s license at 16, that I started to understand what it meant. There was also the pain my family felt in not being able to go back home for many years. I’ll never forget watching my abuelita cry when she found out her mother had passed or my dad when his father passed, and they couldn’t travel to Guadalajar­a to say their goodbyes in person. Being undocument­ed also meant receiving letter after letter from colleges I applied to saying they couldn’t process my applicatio­n because of my lack of status.

But in the summer of 2012, my life changed when President Barack Obama announced the DACA program. I felt as if I was being seen for the first time. It felt powerful that the president of the United States had seen us — and given us hope and permission to pursue our dreams. Not only was I able to attend college, but I also got a job as a student coordinato­r at my university’s center for service and justice and organized for many causes, including immigratio­n reform. Being able to work and have a voice, especially in politics, felt imperative to making a real change for my family and so many others who were still living in the shadows.

As DACA faces continuous attacks from Republican­s, I feel an immense duty to continue helping make real change for communitie­s like ours.

Democrats are fighting for that change and I am proud of the Biden administra­tion’s commitment to preserving and strengthen­ing DACA. Together, we will continue to fight for vital protection­s and a path to citizenshi­p for DACA recipients. President Joe Biden recognizes that the contributi­ons of Dreamers to our country are undeniable and invaluable.

Thanks to DACA, I was given a priceless opportunit­y to make a life in this great country, the only place I have ever called home.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States