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	<title>Jeremy Burton &#8211; Jewcy</title>
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	<title>Jeremy Burton &#8211; Jewcy</title>
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		<title>Op-Ed: Arizona: &#8220;Nazism&#8221; in the Saguaro State</title>
		<link>https://jewcy.com/post/oped_arizona_nazism_saguaro_state?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=oped_arizona_nazism_saguaro_state</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeremy Burton]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2010 04:15:16 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://beta.jewcy.com/?p=24300</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>This compelling piece was written by Jeremy Burton, and has been cross posted with our friends over at J Spot. Reading the news this morning out of Arizona: The enactment of a piece of anti-immigrant based racial profiling, brought to mind the following true story of one family. I hope it sheds some perspective on the&#8230;</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://jewcy.com/post/oped_arizona_nazism_saguaro_state">Op-Ed: Arizona: &#8220;Nazism&#8221; in the Saguaro State</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://jewcy.com">Jewcy</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <i>This compelling piece was written by Jeremy Burton, and has been <a href="http://jspot.org/diary/2640/arizona-nazism-in-the-saguaro-state" target="_blank">cross posted with our friends over at J Spot</a>. </i> </p>
<p> Reading the news this morning out of Arizona: The enactment of a  piece of anti-immigrant based racial profiling, brought to mind the  following true story of one family. I hope it sheds some perspective on  the hateful debates going on in that State: </p>
<p> We don&#8217;t know much  about the early life of Felipe Martinez. He was born sometime in the  1820&#8217;s under the Mexican flag, probably in one of the northern  territories.  What we do know is that in the 1840&#8217;s he was living in El  Paso, part of a region disputed between the Republic of Texas and  Mexico.  When Texas joined the Union in 1846 and the U.S. defeated  Mexico in the war that followed, the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 ceded the northern third of Mexico to the US and residents of non U.S.  origins were given the right by treaty to become U.S. citizens or move  south to Mexico within one year.  </p>
<p> Felipe stayed in El Paso, became a citizen, and, with his wife Dolores, had several children including  Geronimo Martinez, who was born in the Lone Star State of Texas, under  the U.S. Flag. </p>
<p> By the early 1870&#8217;s the family had decamped to Las  Cruces, New Mexico Territory, where Felipe had a store. With the coming  of the copper mining boom in the western territories, his son Geronimo  worked as a post/payroll rider between Las Cruces and Clifton, Arizona  Territory (think of the guys on horseback guarding the stagecoach who  always seemed to get shot in the 1st reel of the John Wayne westerns).  </p>
<p> Geronimo&#8217;s daughter Evangelista was born in Las Cruces, a third generation US  citizen, before he moved the family permanently to Clifton. In 1914 in  Clifton (now part of the brand spanking new state of Arizona),  Evangelista married Santos Colorado, a Mexican immigrant of mixed  indigenous (Indian) and European descent who had come north to work in  the copper mines.  </p>
<p> We know that Santos took his bride back to Chihuahua state to meet  her in-laws in the midst of the Mexican revolution.  We also know that  the border was essentially porous, with workers going back and forth as  the economy demanded, from 1848 until 1924, when the first border  restrictions were enacted during an earlier American anti-immigrant  fervor that also denied many Eastern European Jews entry in the years  before WWII. </p>
<p> Margarita Colorado was born in Clifton in 1915, and  though she was a fourth generation citizen, she was of the first  generation to learn English fluently growing up. Notably, this was while attending a segregated school system in Clifton (it is a not terribly  well known fact that while in the South segregation was a White/Black  system, in the South West it was a 3 tiered system of  White/Brown/Black). </p>
<p> After several years of working as a copper  miner, the boom ended, and Santos moved his family to California where  he was very fortunate to find full time work in the seasonal canning  industry (in addition to working in the cannery, he maintained the tent  camp for migrant workers in the off-season).  He eventually settled with his family in a quiet middle class neighborhood in Antioch, CA, near  the northern end of the central valley&#8217;s agricultural industry.  He  never did become a citizen, and registered every year as a documented  resident until he died in 1978.  Evangelista, the 3rd generation  citizen, also worked in the agricultural industry while raising her  three daughters.  She died in 1981. </p>
<p> As a child I knew Santos &amp; Evangelista, and was the recipient of their love, including  (importantly to a toddler) the pleasures of ice cream and peaches in  their kitchen.  They were my great-grandparents.  </p>
<p> That little girl Margarita married a Mexican immigrant, Jose Casillas Sandoval, whose  family came to El Paso, Texas, fleeing the turmoil under the Mexican  revolution, around 1920.  His father, a local town leader, had taken the family north en mass to escape the political violence in their home  valley (Jose did get his citizenship and served in the U.S. Navy in  WWII).  Jose and Marge (as she preferred to be known) lived in Antioch  where they raised a daughter, my mother, Diane Marie, a fifth generation citizen while also the daughter of an immigrant.   </p>
<p> Some of Jose&#8217;s siblings and their children returned to Mexico after the revolution  subsided and to this day members of the family continue to marry across  the divide of the border and citizenship status,  with some moving back  and forth and maintaining relations on both sides into their 3rd and 4th generations as economic needs and family relations demand.  </p>
<p> So  why tell this story today? </p>
<p> The story of the Mexicans in the South  West preceeds and in many ways has been in tension with the white  migration from the east for 200 years now. </p>
<p> The story of Arizona is the story of a strong Spanish/Mexican culture; Exhibit A: the state  flower is the &quot;saguaro&quot; blossom. </p>
<p> Throughout this story, the border states on both sides of the Rio Grande (or the Rio Bravo del Norte as  its known on its other side), the Gila River valley, and the Colorado  river basin, have been a vibrant open place where people went back and  forth for jobs and family (remember the Magnificent Seven protecting a  Mexican village from bandits?).  Some made it official on one side or  the other, and some didn&#8217;t; but they all contributed to the economy and  the culture. Ninety years after the Mexican civil war, good people in  Chihuahua state, like cops in Ciudad Juarez, are again desperate to get  their families and children across the border to El Paso, this time for  protection as they deal with the consequences of a drug war fed by  American demand.  </p>
<p> Today I can&#8217;t help but think of myself as  fortunate.  Fortunate to have this rich legacy and history; and  &quot;fortunate&quot; that grandpa Jose was strongly Iberian (that&#8217;s Spaniard) in  his features &amp; that my mom married a European Jew (my father).  </p>
<p> Because 90 days from now, a whole bunch of folks who are less &quot;fortunate&quot; than  me and who live in Arizona, some of whom, like me will be 6th, or even  7th and 8th generation citizens will have to carry a passport for  protection just to go across the street to 7-11 and pick up a bottle of  milk.  Because in Arizona, the onus will be on them, just for looking  &quot;suspicious&quot; (i.e. Mexican).  They will be stopped on account of their  &quot;raza,&quot; and required to provide proof of their documented status, or go  directly to jail until they do so.   </p>
<p> Arizona will, i<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/us/politics/24immig.html?src=me&amp;ref=us" target="_blank">n the words of Roger Cardinal Mahony yesterday</a>,  enter into a state like &quot;Nazism.&quot; </p>
<p> As a Jew, I take the term Nazi  seriously.  And as the great-great-great grandson of Felipe Martinez, I  understand exactly how tragic and appropriate a term it is as applied to what has happened this week.   </p>
<p> To the people of Arizona:  How can you look yourselves in the mirror without feeling ashamed?   </p>
<p> Most of you came from elsewhere in the past 20-30 years.  Your state has  doubled in population, but your actions ignore its heritage.  You have  failed to learn about the place you live in and to appreciate the  culture and legacy you have come to. </p>
<p> You complain about  undocumented workers?  You brought them here!  Your housing boom and  desire for services created a demand for workers, and you weren&#8217;t going  to pay for others to come west with you.  So once again, and not for the 1st time in 165 years, the people of Mexico came to build a better life for you, and for themselves.  </p>
<p> So shame on you Arizona, and shame  on you Gov. Jan Brewer.  And especially shame on you Sen. John McCain  because you do know better.  You&#8217;ve embraced hate, and bigotry; scare  tactics and the police state.  This action is evil and it, and you, will be remembered in history as modern day hatemongers in the worst history of Ariziona segregationists, rather than in the best tradition of  cooperation and opportunity. </p>
<p> A pox on you all!  </p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://jewcy.com/post/oped_arizona_nazism_saguaro_state">Op-Ed: Arizona: &#8220;Nazism&#8221; in the Saguaro State</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://jewcy.com">Jewcy</a>.</p>
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