Rising Hate For Migrants Starts With
Criminalizing Them
SANTA FE, NM
(By Pramila Jayapal, Colorlines)
December 18, 2010
)
—
Today marks the 10th
anniversary of International
Migrants Day and the 20th
anniversary of the passage of the
U.N. Convention to Protect Migrant
Workers.
This is an important moment to
reflect on the fact: today nearly one
billion people are on the move
across the world and they are
increasingly the target of hatred
and violence. That’s why
celebrating International Migrants
Day by signing the pledge to respect
immigrants everywhere by dropping
the i-word and demanding the
media do the same.
Politicians and media alike use the
word “illegal” to describe human
beings without immigration status,
sometimes shortening “illegal
immigrant” to “illegals.” While this
may seem trivial to some, the
language of criminality plays an
enormous part in moving people along
the continuum from language to
violent behavior. Calling people
“illegal,” describing them in ways
that make them less them human,
recasts them as members of an
undeserving sub-class that are owed
less respect than what would
otherwise be acceptable for
“regular” human beings.
We know that, leading up to and
during World War II, language was a
powerful factor in moving an
ideological and genocidal agenda.
The language of elimination of an
entire race — described as the
“final solution” — was used
frequently and without apology. In
the decades following the Holocaust,
this kind of language was widely
condemned and deemed unacceptable.
And yet, as recently as this year,
we have seen genocidal language
directed at migrants worldwide.
Consider the recent statement of the
deputy mayor of the Italian city of
Treviso in relation to the issue of
the undocumented Roma migrants: “I
want a revolution against gypsies …
I want to eliminate all the gypsy
children who steal.”
Or consider the United States, where
anti-immigrant extremists have
painted a picture of all-out warfare
that threatens the very idea of
nationhood. Conservative commentator
Pat Buchanan claimed on MSNBC that
the influx of undocumented
immigrants into the U.S. is “an
invasion, the greatest invasion in
history … the last scene is the
deconstruction of the nations.”
The leap from fear mongering to
violence — vigilantism or
state-sponsored — is surprisingly
short. The imagery of war and
warfare helps to up the ante. After
all, if this is really war, we must
protect “our own.”
Across the world, violence against
immigrants is on the rise. The
Libyan government, according to a
report just released by Amnesty
International, has been torturing
undocumented African migrants
through electric shock and beating,
even shooting at fishing boats
because they may have held “illegal
immigrants.”
In Sweden, shortly after the far
right, anti-immigrant party won a
place in Parliament for the first
time, police arrested a 38-year-old
man suspected of carrying out a
dozen shootings, nearly all
immigrants, where one person died
and eight were wounded.
In the United States, the FBI has
documented a dramatic increase in
reported hate crimes against
Hispanics, from 595 in 2003 to 888
in 2007. Along the U.S.-Mexico
border, armed vigilante groups who
claim to be “dedicated to the
defense of American patriotism” are
on the rise, and the New York Times
has consistently reported on the
number of deaths that occur in
detention centers due to callous
disregard for medical needs of
immigrant detainees.
One of our challenges in fighting
the criminalization of migrants is
the most extreme voices in the
dehumanization of immigrants have
been legitimized by the media and
politicians as representatives of
the “other side” of the immigration
debate. In spite of numerous reports
from the Anti-Defamation League, the
Southern Poverty Law Center and
Media Matters that call out the
connections to clear racist and
xenophobic ideologies, groups such
as the Federation for American
Immigration Reform are routinely
called on to give testimony in
Congress or provide comments for
news stories. Their racism skews the
bounds of reasonable discourse about
immigrants — and as a result sets
extreme new bounds for reasonable
policy, too.
As economic insecurity heightens,
Americans and Europeans who would
otherwise support rational and human
polices on migration — polls
consistently find vast majorities in
this camp — are drawn into fear. It
becomes socially acceptable, and
even personally necessary, to
scapegoat or become violent towards
someone else — namely, immigrants.
In this polarized environment, some
policy makers have fueled the frenzy
by embracing restrictionist policies
that further criminalize immigrants.
The success in exploiting fear in an
increasingly fragile economic
environment has led to fringe
political parties across the world
coming into power for the first
time.
The Guardian has documented the rise
of these fringe parties in Europe to
“such a degree they are now in the
position of propping up
governments.” In the U.S.,
politicians who hold extreme
anti-immigrant views are now in
positions of power in the House of
Representatives and are expected to
introduce unprecedentedly regressive
legislation, including an attempt to
amend the Constitution’s
birthright-citizenship clause.
Some are also pushing back,
recognizing the real danger we face
of escalating violence and
polarization. In early 2010, Pope
Benedict XVI, reacting to the riots
in Southern Italy in which African
immigrants were attacked, reminded
people, “An immigrant is a human
being, different in background,
culture and tradition, but a person
to be respected, and possessing
rights and duties. …Violence must
never be a way to resolve
differences.”
We need to push back more — and take
the hate out of the debate. It’s
time to stop using racist,
fear-mongering language that
promotes and even condones violence.
It’s time to create space for a
rational, thoughtful and humane
discussion around migration and
immigration policies that support
the economic and moral need for
managed flows of people. Join me in
celebrating International Migrants
Day by taking a simple but
significant stand for humanity.
That is why Hispanic News and I are
celebrating International Migrants
Day by signing the pledge to respect
immigrants everywhere by dropping
the i-word and demanding the media
do the same.