[This
commentary was originally published in The
Nation.]
Justeen Mancha’s dream
of becoming a psychologist was born of the tropical heat and exploitation
that have shaped farm worker life around Reidsville, Georgia,
for centuries. The wiry, freckle-faced 17-year-old high school junior
has toiled in drought-dry onion fields to help her mother, Maria Christina
Martinez. But early one September morning in 2006, Mancha’s dream was
abruptly deferred.
From the living room
of the battered trailer she and her mother call home, Mancha described
what happened when she came out of the shower that morning. “My mother
went out, and I was alone,” she said. “I was getting ready for school,
getting dressed, when I heard this noise. I thought it was my mother coming
back.” She went on in the Tex-Mex Spanish-inflected Georgia accent now heard throughout Dixie: “Some people were slamming car doors outside the trailer. I heard
footsteps and then a loud boom and then somebody screaming, asking if
we were “illegals,” “Mexicans.” These big men
were standing in my living room holding guns. One man blocked my doorway.
Another guy grabbed a gun on his side. I freaked out. “Oh, my God!,” I yelled.” As more than twenty Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) agents surrounded the trailer, said Mancha, agents inside
interrogated her. They asked her where her mother was; they wanted to
know if her mother was “Mexican” and whether she had “papers” or a green
card. They told her they were looking for “illegals.”
After about five minutes
of interrogation, the agents - who, according to the women’s lawyer, Mary
Bauer of the Southern Poverty Law Center, showed no warrants and had neither
probable cause nor consent to enter the home - simply left. They left
in all likelihood because Mancha and her mother didn’t fit the profile
of the workers at the nearby Crider poultry plant, which had been targeted
by the raid in nearby Stilwell. They were the wrong kind of “Mexicans”;
they were US citizens.
Though she had experienced
discrimination before the raid - in the fields, in the supermarket and
in school - Mancha, who testified before Congress in February, never imagined
such an incident would befall her, since she and her mother had migrated
from Texas to Reidsville. Best
known for harvesting poultry and agricultural products, Reidsville, a
farm town about 200 miles southeast of Atlanta, is also known for harvesting Klan culture behind the walls
of the state’s oldest and largest prison. But its most famous former inmate
is Jim Crow slayer and dreamer, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. His
example inspires Mancha’s new dream: lawyering “for the poor.”
The toll this increasingly
oppressive climate has taken on Mancha represents but a small part of
its effects on non-citizen immigrants, especially undocumented immigrants,
and other Latinos. Mancha and the younger children of the mostly immigrant
Latinos in Georgia are learning and internalizing that they are different
from white - and black - children not just because they have the wrong
skin color but also because many of their parents lack the right papers.
They are growing up in a racial and political climate in which Latinos’
subordinate status in Georgia
and in the Deep South bears more than a passing resemblance
to that of African-Americans who were living under Jim Crow. Call it Juan
Crow: the matrix of laws, social customs, economic institutions and symbolic
systems enabling the physical and psychic isolation needed to control
and exploit undocumented immigrants. Listening to the effects of Juan
Crow on immigrants and citizens like Mancha (”I can’t sleep sometimes
because of nightmares,” she says. “My arms still twitch. I see ICE agents
and men in uniform, and it still scares me”) reminds me of the trauma
I heard among the men, women and children controlled and exploited by
state violence in wartime El
Salvador. Juan Crow has roots in the US South, but
it stirs traumas bred in the hemispheric South.
In fact, the surge
in Latino migration (the Southeast is home to the fastest-growing Latino
population in the United States) is moving many of the institutions
and actors responsible for enforcing Jim Crow to resurrect and reconfigure
themselves in line with new demographics. Along with the almost daily
arrests, raids and home invasions by federal, state and other authorities,
newly resurgent civilian groups like the Ku Klux Klan, in addition to
more than 144 new “nativist extremist” groups and 300 anti-immigrant organizations
born in the past three years, mostly based in the South, are harassing
immigrants as a way to grow their ranks.
Meanwhile, a legal
regime of distinctions between the rights of undocumented immigrants and
citizens has emerged and is being continually refined and expanded. A
2006 Georgia
law denies undocumented immigrants driver’s licenses. Federal laws that
allowed local and state authorities to pursue blacks under the Fugitive
Slave Act appear to be the model for the Bush Administration’s Agreements
of Cooperation in Communities to Enhance Safety and Security (ACCESS)
program, which allows states to deputize law enforcement officials to
chase, detain, arrest and jail the undocumented. Georgia’s
lowest-paid workers, the undocumented, now occupy a separate, unequal
and clandestine place that has made it increasingly difficult for them
to work, rent homes or attend school.
The pre- and post-Reconstruction
regional economic system centered on the stately Southern mansions that
once graced Atlanta’s storied Peachtree Street has given way to a more global finance-driven system
centered on the cold, anonymous skyscrapers that loom over Peachtree today.
And in a more hopeful sign, some veterans of the civil rights struggle
against Jim Crow are joining Latino immigrants in what will likely be
one of the major movements of the twenty-first century.
These and other facets
of immigrant life in Georgia, the Deep South and
the entire country are but a small part of the labyrinthine institutional
and cultural arrangements defining the strange career of Juan Crow.
The immigrant condition
in Georgia worsened in the wake of the failed immigration
reform proposal last year. The national immigration debate had the effect
of further legitimizing and emboldening the most extreme elements of the
anti-immigrant movement in places like Georgia. Since the advent of what he terms “Georgiafornia,”
for example, D.A. King, a former marine and contributor to the anti-immigrant
hate site VDARE, has leapfrogged into the national limelight to become
one of the major advocates for deportation and security - only “immigration
reform.” Strengthened by the defeat of national reform, King, State Senator
Chip Rogers and a growing galaxy of formerly fringe groups succeeded in
getting some of the country’s most draconian anti-immigrant laws passed.
These new racial codes are disguised by the national security-infused
bureaucratic language of laws with names like the Georgia Security and
Immigration Compliance Act (GSICA).
Their efforts were
egged on by the Bush Administration’s implementation of the ACCESS program
last August. ACCESS provided new excuses for state and local officials
to pursue the undocumented in states like Georgia. In tandem
with the federal government, King and Rogers led the push to pass GSICA,
which requires law enforcement officers to investigate the citizenship
status of anyone charged with a felony or driving under the influence.
GSICA and federal efforts laid the foundation on which the other legal
and social structures of Juan Crow grow.
Georgia’s
estimated 500,000 undocumented immigrants must think twice before seeking
emergency support at hospitals or clinics because of laws that require
them to prove their legal status before receiving many state benefits.
“No-match letter” regulations requiring all employers to confirm the Social
Security numbers of their employees have been issued by the Social Security
Administration and have resulted in firings and growing fear among immigrants.
But even without the no-match letters, undocumented immigrants in Georgia have many
reasons to fear going to work. If they work at a company with more than
500 employees, for example (and most undocumented immigrants are employed
in meatpacking, agricultural, carpet and other industries with hundreds,
sometimes thousands, of workers), they must worry about laws that punish
employers who knowingly hire undocumented immigrants and mandate that
firms with state contracts check the immigration status of their employees.
Similar laws denying or restricting housing, education, transportation
and other aspects of immigrant life are also being instituted across Georgia.
For a firsthand look
at how the interplay of state and federal policies fuels Juan Crow, one
need go no further than the immigrant-heavy area surrounding Buford
Highway in DeKalb County,
near Atlanta. During the weekend
of October 18, 2007, the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights (GLAHR)
and other advocacy groups from across the state reported sharp increases
in arrests of immigrants in the area. “This weekend alone we received
more than 200 phone calls from people telling horrible stories of arrests,”
said GLAHR executive director Adelina Nicholls of Mexico City. “There are hundreds of Latinos who’ve been hunted down
like animals, taken to jail, and they don’t even know why or whether or
not they’ll be released,” said Nicholls more recently.
Nicholls and other
advocates are working feverishly in response to the exponential increase
in official and extra-official profiling of immigrants. Last year there
were forty-four reported armed robberies of DeKalb County - area
Latino immigrants in August alone. One especially outrageous incident
took place just west of Atlanta, in the rural town
of Carrollton, last June. Emelina
Ramirez, a Honduran immigrant, called local police to report that her
roommates were attacking her, punching and kicking her in the stomach.
Ramirez was pregnant. Locals say that when police got to Ramirez’s apartment,
officers handcuffed her, took her to jail and then ran her fingerprints
through a federal database. After discovering that she was undocumented,
they contacted federal authorities as stipulated under ACCESS and GSICA.
Ramirez was then deported.
Nicholls says she
and GLAHR staff exist in a perpetual state of exhaustion after having
to expand their DeKalb County work to deal with cases like
Ramirez’s. Adding to their load is the situation in nearby Cobb
County, where the local jail has 500 adults captured on streets, at
work and in their homes. All of these people, says Nicholls, are awaiting
deportation.
Beneath the growing
fear and intensifying racial tensions of Georgia
lies the new, more globalized economic system that sustains Juan Crow.
At the core of the economy in Dixie are the financial
dealings taking place in the shiny towers of Peachtree Street, buildings constructed atop the ashes of plantation
houses.
Lining Peachtree today
are SunTrust, Bank of America and other titans of global finance with
major operations in downtown Atlanta. Along with the financial players of Charlotte, North Carolina, the companies occupying
the towers on Peachtree are among the prime movers behind the transformation
and restructuring of the Georgia economy - and of its race relations. On
Peachtree you can find US banks and financial firms investing in companies
doing business in post-NAFTA Latin America, where nonunion labor and miserably
low wages drive immigration to Georgia and other states. The investment portfolios
of many of these companies have grown fat with high-yield investments
in the poultry, meatpacking, rug, tourism and other Georgia industries employing undocumented immigrants
from Mexico and Latin America. The need to keep down the wages of these undocumented
workers is fulfilled with the legal, political and psychological discipline
of Juan Crow. Along with the most visible legacy of Jim Crow - Georgia’s massive and growing population of black
prisoners, housed in Reidsville and other, mostly rural prisons - the
Peachtree State’s undocumented immigrants find themselves at the bottom of the
South’s new political and economic order.
By keeping down wages
of the undocumented and documented workforce, Juan Crow doesn’t just pit
undocumented Latino workers against black and white workers. It also makes
possible every investor’s dream of merging Third World wages with First
World amenities. Promotional brochures put out by the state’s Department
of Economic Development, for example, tout Georgia’s “below average” wages
and its status as a “right to work” (nonunion) state. Georgia’s infrastructure, its proximity to US
markets and its incentives - nonunion labor, low wages, government subsidies,
cheap land - allow the state to position itself as an attractive investment
opportunity for foreign companies. While the fortunes of Ford, GM and
other US
companies have declined in the South, the fortunes of foreign automakers
here are rising. Companies like Korean car manufacturer Kia, which plans
to open a $1.2 billion plant by 2009, see in Georgia and other Southern states a new pool of
cheap labor. Of the $5.7 billion of total new investment in Georgia in 2006,
more than 36 percent was from international companies - companies that
were also responsible for nearly half of the 24,660 jobs created by government
- supported foreign ventures that year.
Also critical to the
economic strategies formulated in the towers on Peachtree
Street is another Latin-centered component: free trade with Latin
America. “We are the gateway to the Americas,” boasted Kenneth Stewart, commissioner
of the Georgia Department of Economic Development. Stewart was among the
more than 1,000 people, including three US Cabinet members and finance
ministers, trade representatives, investors, corporate executives and
politicians from thirty-three countries in the hemisphere, who attended
the sold-out Americas Competitiveness Forum at the Marriott on Peachtree Street last June. As an organizer of the event, the gregarious
Stewart, like many of the region’s economic leaders, considers hosting
the forum a critical part of Atlanta’s bid to become the secretariat of the Free Trade Area of the
Americas
organization. Local elites support building a $10 million, privately financed
FTAA headquarters complex, possibly in the area near Peachtree and the
Sweet Auburn neighborhood.
Before being rapidly
gentrified by the white-collar employees working in the Peachtree towers,
Sweet Auburn, the birthplace of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was
one of the cradles of the African-American freedom struggle. Echoing the
connection frequently made here between increased globalization and commerce
and improved race relations, Stewart told me that free trade “will benefit
citizens of Georgia
and the citizens of Mexico
and other Latin American countries.” But when I asked him about the increased
racial tensions, including the murders of some immigrants in Georgia, and about the growing
repression of non-citizen Mexican workers, Stewart abruptly ended the
interview.
For her part, Atlanta
Mayor Shirley Franklin - among the most recent in a long line of African-American
Atlanta mayors that includes former Martin Luther King colleague and Wal-Mart
consultant Andrew Young (who has an office in a Peachtree high-rise) -
also linked local freedom struggles with global free trade. Before the
Americas Competitiveness Forum, she and other regional elites distributed
splashy brochures promoting the city’s FTAA bid. Included in the brochure
was a picture of the headstone of King’s grave, which bears the inscription
Free at last. Free at last. Thank God Almighty I’m Free at last. The brochure
promoting “the city too busy to hate” also paints a positive, global Kumbaya
picture of the plight of Georgia’s migrants: “With its attractive quality
of life and rapidly expanding job market, Metro Atlanta draws thousands
of newcomers every year and has growing Latin, Asian and African American
communities.”
“This is the home
of Dr. King,” said Franklin in her welcome speech at the packed forum. “It is in the spirit
of peace, it is in the spirit of collaboration and it is in the spirit
of fairness that we attack this issue of [economic] competitiveness,”
she told her audience in King-like cadences. But had Franklin taken her foreign visitors on the short
stroll from their hotel to Sweet Auburn, they would not have found the
racial harmony described in the glossy brochures and spirited speeches.
Documented and undocumented
Latinos dealing with the economic and political effects of Juan Crow in
Georgia (and across the country) find themselves
unwitting actors in a centuries-old racial drama, which they must alter
if Juan Crow is to be defeated. The major difference today is that Latinos
also find themselves having to navigate a racial and political topography
that is no longer black and white. Young Latinos, in particular, attend
schools that teach them about Jim Crow while giving them a daily dose
of Juan Crow.
High school senior
Ernesto Chávez (a pseudonym) does not look forward to becoming one of
the few undocumented students in Georgia to go to a university like Kennesaw State, which requires them to carry student IDs with special color
coding, or to a college that denies them aid and forces them to pay exorbitant,
nearly impossible-to-pay out-of-state tuition. He has already learned
enough about Jim Crow - and Juan Crow - in high school.
Chávez, who sports
a buzz cut and wears baggy clothes, said that when he studied Jim Crow
in school, he identified strongly with the heroic generation of African-American
youth who rebelled against it. “They couldn’t ride in the same trains,
they couldn’t drink from the same fountains,” he said during an interview
in a classroom at Miller Grove
High School in the Atlanta
suburb of Lithonia. “I felt mad when I read about that, even though they
weren’t my people,” said the soft-spoken Mexican, who is part of the small
but growing minority of Latinos at Miller Grove (African-American students
make up about 93 percent of the student body).
Chávez said he came
to know the limits of his physical, social and psychic mobility, thanks
to the Georgia law that requires people to show proof
of citizenship or legal status in order to obtain a driver’s license.
“It’s hard to describe what it feels like to be ‘illegal’ here in Georgia. It’s like
you can’t move,” he said, his voice cracking slightly. “It feels scary
because you know that when you go out to a public place, you might never
know if you’re going to come back. I’m really scared because my mother
drives without a license. She’s scared too.”
Chávez and other Latino
students also expressed their shock and dismay at being discriminated
against by some of the descendants of those discriminated against by Jim
Crow.
“When I first got
here, I was confused. I went to a mostly white school in Gwinnett County
and started noticing the fifth-grade kids saying things to me, racial
stuff, asking me questions like, ‘Are you illegal?’” said Chávez as he
fidgeted nervously in one of those ubiquitous and visibly uncomfortable
school desks. “But when I was in seventh grade, I went to Richards
Middle School, where it wasn’t the white people saying things, it was
black people. They didn’t like Mexican kids. They would call us ‘Mexican
border hoppers,’ ‘wetbacks’ and all these things. Every time they’d see
me, they yelled at me, threatened to beat me up after school for no reason
at all.” Asked how it felt, he said, “It’s like, now since they have rights,
they can discriminate [against] others.”
Chávez’s family, along
with many immigrant families in Georgia, will be watching
closely to see how the state’s justice system deals with the still-pending
2005 case of six Mexican farm workers killed execution-style in their
trailers, which were parked near the cotton and peanut farms they toiled
on in Tifton. Pretrial motions began last July in the case, in which prosecutors
allege that four African-American men bludgeoned five of the immigrants
to death with aluminum baseball bats and shot one in the head while robbing
them in their trailer home. Though the face of anti-immigrant racism in
the Juan Crow South is still overwhelmingly identified as white by the
immigrants I interviewed, some immigrants also see a black face on anti-immigrant
hate.
Politically, a growing
divide has emerged between pro- and anti-immigrant blacks in Georgia.
The African-American face of Juan Crow is embodied by State Senator and
probable Democratic Atlanta mayoral candidate Kasim Reed (he’s also considering
a gubernatorial bid). Reed proposed a five-year prison sentence for anyone
caught trying to secure employment with a false ID. Local Latino and African-American
activists have criticized Reed for what Bruce Dixon of the online Black Agenda Report called his “morally
bankrupt attempt to outflank Republicans on the right.”
Activists like Janvieve
Williams of the US Human Rights Network, based in Atlanta,
counter the anti-immigrant tide by elevating the tone of the debate and
shifting the terms to human rights. As an Afro-Panamanian immigrant, Williams
says she feels discrimination from many whites in Georgia, but she also experiences discrimination
from mestizo immigrants. Her perception of anti-immigrant sentiments among
African-Americans adds another layer to the complex racial dynamics unleashed
by Juan Crow. “I’m caught between African-Americans who don’t want to
understand immigration and immigrants and Latinos who use words like ‘moreno,’
‘negritos,’ ‘los negros’ and other terms that are not good,” says Williams.
But rather than see
her Afro-Latino identity and her Latin American political experience as
a barrier between communities, Williams - who co-hosts Radio
Diaspora, a weekly Afro-Latino program that helped promote
the 50,000-plus immigrants’ rights marches in 2006 - uses Latin American
media and organizing experience to cross linguistic and political borders.
“We need to move from civil rights to human rights. We need to start using
the language and tools of human rights around the issue of immigration.
It’s an international issue that needs an international framework,” says
Williams, whose organization co-sponsored the visit to Atlanta last May
by the United Nations special rapporteur on the human rights of migrants.
Williams’s organization brought together many groups who shared stories
of Juan Crow with the special rapporteur, who took his report to the UN
General Assembly.
In the same way that
the concept of civil rights grew as a response to Jim Crow, the human
rights framework advocated by Williams and other immigrants’ rights activists
in the South and across the country challenges traditional approaches
to race and rights. “Some civil rights leaders here don’t think human
rights affects us in the United States,” says Williams. “A lot of the [civil
rights] elders of that movement are not linked to the human rights movement,
and that also gets in the way of working together.”
Not all of Georgia’s
civil rights elders fit thirty-something Williams’s description. The Rev.
Joseph Lowery, the lieutenant to Martin Luther King Jr., says he did not
perceive the threat that some whites and African-American Georgians felt
from the massive immigrant marches of 2006; instead he sees in the millions
marching in Atlanta and across the country “instruments of God’s will
to change this country.” Reverend Lowery, who now leads the Georgia Coalition
for the People’s Agenda, has spoken eloquently and vociferously against
what he considers “wicked” immigration policies and has attended pro-immigrant
rallies. He believes that massive immigration to the United States came about because of the workings
within the tall buildings like those in spitting distance of his office
in the historic Atlanta Life building on Auburn Avenue. “We’ve globalized money, we’ve globalized trade and
commerce, but we haven’t globalized fairness toward work and labor. The
solution to the ‘problem’ of immigration and other problems is globalization
of justice,” he said.
Speaking of the relationship
between American blacks and Latino immigrants, Lowery said, “There are
many differences between our experience and that of immigrant Latinos
- but there is a family resemblance between Jim Crow and what is being
experienced by immigrants. Both met economic oppression. Both met racial
and ethnic hostility.
“But the most important
thing to remember,” said Lowery, as if casting out the demons of Juan
and Jim Crow, “is that, though we may have come over on different ships,
we’re all in the same damn boat now.”
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentato,r
Roberto Lovato, is a contributing Associate Editor with
New America Media. He is also a frequent contributor
to The Nation
and his work has appeared in the Los Angeles
Times, Salon, Der Spiegel, Utne Magazine, La Opinion, and other national
and international media outlets. Prior to becoming a writer, Roberto was
the Executive Director of the Central American Resource Center
(CARECEN), then the country’s
largest immigrant rights organization. Click
here to contact him or via his Of América
blog.
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