When ICE Hit Mississippi, Its Citizens Showed up for Immigrant Families
The Mississippi immigration raid detained hundreds and left children stranded on the first day of school. It also evoked a massive humanitarian response in a state not traditionally friendly to immigrants.
YES! Magazine
When federal agents engineered the nation’s largest single-state immigration raid at multiple chicken processing plants in Mississippi, a scrappy network of immigrant activists knew their work was about to get much harder.
Mississippi has never been a hotbed for immigration advocacy, despite a growing immigrant population working in its food processing and hospitality industries. The small band of migrant advocates in the state operate in hostile territory, and they are woefully underfinanced.
That changed last week after the Department of Homeland Security agents rounded up and detained almost 700 undocumented immigrants at seven chicken processing plants in central Mississippi.
The raids unleashed a national outrage that sent a legion of organizers, interpreters, attorneys, and others pouring into the state from across the country. Defying state sanctuary laws, cities and churches set up collection centers to help those affected. And within 24 hours, monetary donations to one of the state’s primary immigrant organizations, the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance, had reached six-figure status.
“There are so many people to thank who joined together with us so quickly to form a legal team and other teams to help,” says Patricia Ice, legal project director at the alliance. “Today we are not the only ones, and I appreciate you all.”
UPDATE: Helping those affected by the raids MIRA staff is out in the field today, in Morton, Forest, and Canton...
Posted by Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance on Saturday, August 10, 2019
Posted by ACLU of Mississippi on Monday, August 12, 2019
The alliance was also organized hospitality employees on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and was working to unite laborers at the state’s chicken processing plants—while ignoring the smoldering gaze of politicians hostile to their work. In 2010, for example, then-Lt. Gov. Phil Bryant accused the alliance of breaking the law for legally aiding immigrants with citizenship applications. Later, as governor, Bryant joined a majority of legislators to ban so-called “sanctuary cities” in the state. They also promoted bills requiring police to check the immigration status of people who are arrested, and supported other bills prohibiting state “business transactions,” with undocumented workers, including driver’s license or business license renewal. Conservative politicians here make space in every campaign platform to clamp down on “illegals.” And then, just days after a white extremist gunman published a shrill, racist manifesto targeting Hispanics and later killed 22 people inside a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement joined forces with the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District to carry out the biggest raid the nation has ever seen. As in previous raids in the state, they targeted businesses that Chandler and others had been working to unionize, inciting the kind of terror in families that is sure to last for years. Meanwhile, no employer in last week’s raid has yet been charged.This is the one that should be held responsible. Smh #MississippiRaids #ICEraidsMS #ICEraids pic.twitter.com/JbBG4KunyL
— 🌊Sunny Baudelaire🌊 💅🏽💁🏽♀️ (@AquilaThomas09) August 8, 2019
What’s happening now, Chandler says, is quite similar to when the U.S. passed the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to ditch migrant workers who had slaved to connect the nation’s railroads. Chandler has worked with unions in Mississippi and elsewhere, and says he’s personally witnessed abuse by U.S. border officers. “We have a long history of abuse in America,” he says. “Laws are passed to manipulate labor, not help immigrants. This is just who we are. It’s the essence of America.” This past week, however, gave Chandler a glimpse into what can happen when the American public disagrees with its government and shows its humanity. For him, it’s a nice change.This is too much grief and trauma for such a tiny human to bear.
— John J. Bauters 🏳️🌈 (@JohnBauters) August 8, 2019
I cry every time I see this image, out of the shame I feel to be part of a country that believes this is okay. And no, I don’t care how her parents got here.#ICEraids #ICE #ICEraidsMS pic.twitter.com/Yq5xtBBg4j
Adam Lynch wrote this article for YES! Magazine. Adam is word-kicker from Mississippi who enjoys picking arguments over politics. Fight with him on Twitter @A_damn_Lynch, or on Facebook, if that’s still a thing.
This article appeared on YES! Magazine on August 12, 2019. It is published under a Creative Commons license.
Join the Conversation