Archive for November, 2011

Migrant Workers in Illinois and North Carolina

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

I remember being a kid, seeing old black-and-white footage of migrant workers working in the fields, picking fruits and vegetables. My parents always watched Spanish-language television, which covered many different aspects of Latin American life. One vivid news clip that I’ll never forget was of a migrant who drowned, trying to cross the Rio Grande River into the United States to make a better life for himself and his family.

The history, literature and images of migrant workers have become part of our rich American history. From John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, Dorothea Lange’s iconic image of the “migrant mother” and César Estrada Chávez’s legacy as a farm worker, labor leader, and civil rights activist, what I remember is just one small piece of a long struggle.

By the early 20th century, American cities were growing dramatically and agriculture needed to meet expanded needs for food. Congress passed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1917. This law established a legal basis for the importation of some 73,000 Mexican workers. During the Great Depression, foreign demand for agricultural exports plummeted and prices dropped. In an effort to open up jobs to native-born citizens, the Immigration and Naturalization Service cooperated with local authorities to deport more than 400,000″ Repatriados” back to Mexico in the 1930s. At least half were U.S. citizens, mostly the children of immigrants.

Generations later, the situation remains the same. In 2011 alone, the U.S. expelled nearly 400,000 illegal immigrants (Immigration and Customs Enforcement Bureau, October 2011). More than eight million undocumented workers, who comprise five percent of the work force, are embedded in the American labor market. Many of these people risk their lives to cross the border; many die on their way, while others are caught by the US Border Patrol and deported. Undocumented workers face extraordinary economic hardship in their home countries, encouraging them to endure these dangers.

Once in the United States, it is unsurprising that migrants are often employed in the most undesirable occupations. Meat-packing plants, landscaping, picking food or tobacco: all are low-wage jobs in physically demanding and difficult conditions. Without legal accountability or safety standards, most middle-class Americans would never dream of accepting such toil. Yet these tasks remain essential, underpinning the basic fabric of the American economy and quality of life.

All the while, undocumented immigrants live under the radar with meager wages and poor access to education, social services, and health care. Nonetheless, I have seen how they remain resilient and strive to be part of the American Dream. In this photographic essay, I show a glimpse of migrant workers’ daily lives.

TEXT and PHOTOGRAPHS by Carlos Javier Ortiz / facingchange.org

With support from Leica Camera

A Future for Homeless Children 2011

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

Homeless families are increasing at an alarming rate in the United States, with profound effects on millions of American children. One in fifty children experiences homelessness in America each year, according to a recent study by the National Center on Family Homelessness. Nearly half of those children are under the age of six – the most vulnerable group of all.

Dr. Jack Shonkoff, Director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, believes that the consequences of homelessness on young children will affect them and society not only in the short term, but also throughout their lives. “Research on the biology of stress in early childhood shows how chronic stress caused by major adversity, such as extreme poverty, abuse or neglect, can weaken developing brain architecture and permanently set the body’s stress response system on high alert, thereby increasing the risk for a range of chronic diseases,” he expounded in a recent paper. He went on to state that, “Research shows that later interventions are likely to be less successful – and in some cases are ineffective,” and that, “homelessness is providing the foundation for a lot of things that are going to cost society a lot of money later.”

Such grim forecasts make the work of organizations such as Horizons for Homeless Children (HHC) that much more critical. The program, located in Boston, provides day care and early education for homeless children under six.

For mother Nicole Adams, once homeless and now living in temporary housing, HHC offers her two-year-old daughter Khani an environment that encourages her thirst for learning. It also provides a safe haven from the violence that plagues her neighborhood, where seven shootings, including the murder of a child, occurred this past year. “I just definitely want a different life for her than what I had, period, “ explained Nicole.

Without the program, these children would spend their days in shelters or on the streets. With it, they are provided the tools for healthy growth and development so that they will be on pace with their peers as they enter kindergarten, and in the long term, have a greater chance at success.

TEXT and PHOTOGRAPHS by Lucian Perkins

With support from Leica Camera

Occupy Wall Street Eviction 2011

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

Over the last two months, Occupy Wall Street spread across the nation as each new economic statistic grimly confirms the disparity between rich and poor continuing to grow while unemployment remains high and stagnant. The protesters were initially mocked and denigrated, but public outcry galvanized by pepper spray and mass arrest police tactics added to the persistence and popularity of the movement.

© Alan Chin / FacingChange.org

The response from local governments has varied from city to city. In New York it was marked by heavy-handedness tempered with reluctant tolerance. This week, there was a conference call of city governments across the country to coordinate a crackdown. For the protesters, this drives home one of their key points, that the structure of political and economic power has become too tone-deaf and disconnected from realities on the street.

On Monday night, the heavy hand reasserted itself with force in Lower Manhattan. The police evicted the demonstrators in the middle of the night without warning, arrested several hundred of them, and denied journalists access to witness the operation. Mayor Bloomberg cited safety and sanitation as justification — legitimate concerns, to be sure, as the encampment attracted some crime and complaints of noise — but the timing and manner of his decision in the face of a court order left little doubt that respect for civil liberties took a back seat to reasserting the status quo.

© Alan Chin / FacingChange.org

The courts then supported Bloomberg after the fact, permitting 24-hour access to Zuccotti Park but not sleeping bags or tents, effectively ending the original protest for the moment. Crowds gathered the next day in different locations to continue demonstrating.

The number of people actually sleeping at any given moment were never large, perhaps several hundred; but tens of thousands passed through over sixty days. Some were unlikely allies, like establishment politicians and culturally disparate labor union workers, others came to gawk, some to disagree and debate. Especially as the weather got colder, spirits had been flagging as activists debated what to do next.

© Anthony Suau / FacingChange.org

By evicting the protesters in such a contentious manner, the mayor and the police may have inadvertently rejuvenated the movement. Whether that turns out to be the case or not, the protest succeeded in changing the national conversation: There is now a clear populist alternative to the Tea Party.

TEXT by Alan Chin  / PHOTOGRAPHS by Anthony Suau and Alan Chin

Landscapes of American History

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

With the generous support of Leica, I was able to travel to western South Dakota and Nebraska and photograph across the land that the Sioux and Cheyenne tribes once freely roamed.

These photographs are from a series of landscapes about American history. Not the history we are taught in our schools of George Washington crossing the Delaware, or Thomas Jefferson writing the Declaration of Independence, but rather a history closer to my heart, a history of violence and conquest and the struggle for freedom and equality. Each photograph is from a place forgotten, ignored, or memorialized, because what we choose to remember about our past is as compelling as what we choose to forget.

I’ve also interwoven recent events of historic significance: A decommissioned nuclear Minutemen missile control center, the grassy knoll in Dallas where President Kennedy was assassinated, Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday celebration in Simi Valley, California, and the first day in New York State that gay and lesbian couples could legally marry.

In my mind, as an American, they are all connected.

- Andrew Lichtenstein

 

With support from Leica Camera