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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 2017)
Street Roots • Nov. 10-16, 2017 Page 5 News IMMIGRATION, from page 4 She makes good money with the wreaths - $4,000 a month - but pays a third in taxes and goes without work in January and February. “It’s tough, but hope is what I lean on,” Reyes Pacheco said in Spanish. “A lot of families are in this kind of situation. Everything gets resolved in time.” She has her own plot at a community garden that reflects her roots in a small Mexican pueblo named San Esteban Atatlahuca, two hours from Oaxaca, Mexico, the place where cacao (chocolate) beans originated. During the latest season, she planted so many chilies she lost track of which were which. That’s no small matter when some are spicy chocolate habaneros. “I had to start tasting them to find out if they were spicy or not,” she recalled, laughing. Once a week, Reyes We h a w « t even talked Pacheco said she takes about the peyohologleal her three kids to a restaurant so they can eat effect this Is liavlap on a their fill. Their favorite is whole fe neration of la tin o Juan Colorado. Her own children who are going to dream is to someday start grow up h aling America^ a Oaxacan bakery. because !t*s separating them The work making from th e ir parents coronas, is “very painful,” Reyes Pacheco said. Now RAMO1M R A M Í R E Z , P C U N P R E S ID E N T 30, she’s done it annually since she was 18 or 19. Smaller ones pay $1.30 each; more elaborate ones pay $3 each. She can do 75 of the larger ones in a day, or 105 smaller ones. “We work from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., or sometimes 6 a.m. to 5 p.m,” Reyes Pacheco said. “It’s hard on the hands. Los Mexicanos work all the time.” This is hardly news to Rebeca Velazquez, who leads Mujeres Luchadoras Progresistas, a Woodburn nonprofit that supports women with health care and self-esteem building. Velazquez said the politics around immigration often overlook women. “A woman works in the fields like a man does, and often a man is better paid,” Velazquez said. “We’re hard-working people. The majority of the women are working, too. It’s not just the men who are working.” Every year since 1992, Velazquez’s group has made Christmas wreaths, to be sold in to Portland, Eugene and Seattle. This year, a portion of their 1,200 coronas will be sold at Grand Central Bakery on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland. Among the 170 women who made the wreaths are documented and undocumented workers, field workers, housewives, domestic violence survivors and sexual assault survivors, she said. “There’s no work in the fields (in winter),” Velazquez said, “so all we can do is this, and this is what we do.” magine a trip to see your father for the first time - a man you know only through a computer screen. “When we went back to Mexico, Jo sé Manuel) was a little afraid (of his dad), but the second day, he hugged him,” Reyes Pacheco said of her 3-year-old son. “He knows who his dad is, but he couldn t hug him, so in his mind, to see him, to be able to hug him, it was a little hard for him at first. But then he was hugging him and I P H O T O BY A R K A D Y B R O W N Margarita Reyes Pacheco is a single mother of three. She is married, but her husband was deported to Mexico. She has considered moving back to Mexico to be with her husband once her children, who are U.S. citizens, are grown. Research suggests this relocation has hugging him.” PCUN’s Ramirez became emotional when become commonplace in recent years. More Mexicans now move back to Mexico than told of José Manuel’s daily video chats with come to the United States. his dad. It struck a personal chord. Velazquez, of Mujeres Luchadoras “In my case, that’s my son-in-law. That’s Progresistas, said some immigrants are the father of our grandkids,” Ramirez said. experiencing the ending of la ilusión - the Ramirez said ICE raids and deportations illusion. don’t just affect an estimated 11 million The illusion, Velazquez said, is the belief undocumented immigrants, but ripple out to that our immigration problems will someday 58 million Latinos in the U.S. end. It’s possible la ilusión grows from what “These are kids,” he said. “We haven’t Ronald Reagan did in 1986. The even talked about the psychological effect Immigration Reform and Control Act this is having on a whole generation of granted green cards to 2.7 million Latino children who are going to grow up undocumented immigrants. hating America, because it’s separating Now, under another Republican, the them from their parents.” pendulum has swung the other way. Reyes Pacheco and José Manuel visit “If my husband isn’t going to be able to Alejandro as often as possible, but the trips be with me, I don’t know,” Reyes Pacheco are expensive. The pair are working with an said. “I think I’m going to have to go be attorney and the Mexican Embassy here with him.” “but are now thinking that he’s not eligible to come back,” Reyes Pacheco said. f Reyes Pacheco were to return to Alejandro was deported in 2010 and has Mexico, who would take care of the considered crossing the Sonoran Desert couple’s three children? Who would pick the illegally to come back, Reyes Pacheco said. cranberries or make the coronas? Reyes Pacheco also has to pay for her Ann Marie Moss, spokesperson for the own documents, she said. Each new Oregon Farm Bureau, said a “shrinking application for legal residency, whether labor pool” lately has affected fruit orchards, DACA or a U visa, costs several hundred to nurseries and greenhouses across the state. more than a thousand dollars, not including “A lot of farmers (in those industries) have attorney’s fees. It’s a lot for a single mother had a hard time finding enough labor to of three. Alejandro doesn’t make enough harvest everything,” Moss said. growing avocados to contribute. The state agency supports If not for the health problems of her “comprehensive” immigration reform, she eldest child, Michael, Reyes Pacheco might said. It has invited ICE officials to forums still be in Mexico herself. She went back to on fixing “America’s broken immigration Oaxaca in 2007, she said, intending to stay. system.” But when Michael got sick, they went to a The U.S. government has long been Mexican hospital, and his situation didn’t involved, on behalf of big agricultural improve after two weeks, so she sent him interests, in bringing Mexican farmworkers back - on a plane, because Michael is a U.S. to this country. citizen. In 1821, when Mexico gained She then spent three days walking across independence from Spain, it included all of the Sonoran Desert because she didn’t have California and even parts of modern-day legal documentation. She and other Oregon. Decades later, the bracero migrants were robbed by masked men. program, supported by the State Lately, she’s started thinking about a day Department, began busing agricultural when her children are grown and whether she’d move back to Mexico to be with See IMMIGRATION, page 11 Alejandro. I