April 19, 2017 Page 15 Help Our Immigrant Brothers and Sisters c ontinued from p age 7 our children so we could arrive on safe ground. While here our children have con- sidered committing suicide, made desper- ate from confinement. The teenagers say that being here, life makes no sense. One of our children said he wanted to break the window to jump out and end this nightmare . . . They grab the chord [sic] that holds their ID cards and tighten it around their necks, saying they want to die if they don’t get out. And the smallest children, who are only two years old, cry during the night be- cause they cannot express what they feel . . . We left our homes in Central America to escape violence, threats and corruption. We thought this country would help us, but now we are locked up with our children in a place where we feel threatened, including by some of the medical personnel, leaving us with no one to trust.” The new executive orders on immigra- tion could mean locking up more fami- lies and building more detention centers. This may be fantastic news for the private prison stock business and for-profit pris- on industry but it is terrible news for the thousands of innocent children at risk of inappropriate cruel and unusual punish- ment. Now there is another cruel twist: the Department of Homeland Security is considering separating children from their parents at the border. Parents would be de- tained while their children would be placed in the care of the government or sent to live with relatives in the United States. It’s hard to imagine separating children and families even in familiar surroundings — and certainly not in a new country and in the horrendous situations we have seen these families face. I can still remember the overwhelming panic I felt the day I became separated from my mother at New York’s large Abyssinian Baptist Church right before a worship service began when I was about seven. In the bustling crowd going up into the balcony, I let go of my mother’s hand. Hap- pily I was among friendly people who sum- moned an usher who took me down to the pulpit where the preacher embraced me and asked the congregation if anyone knew this child. My mother who had been frantically looking for me in the balcony stood and said yes and an usher reunited us immediately. But I remember the panic and fear. Nothing is worse than feeling abandoned and sepa- rated from a parent in a strange place with strangers. Is this how our nation is going to treat “the least of these” — our little ones? Surely we are better than this! Marian Wright Edelman is President of the Children’s Defense Fund. It Does Good Things TM This page is sponsored by Oregon Lottery MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 10 11 12 13 Passover Begins at Sundown Encourage a Young Writer Day National Sibling Day 17 Sherlock Hemlock’s Birthday (Sesame Street character) 24 Library of Congress established (1800) Pigs-in-a-Blanket Day President Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act, 1964 (1964) 18 Paul Revere’s Fa- mous Ride (1775) Great San Francisco Earthquake In 1906. Pet Owner’s Day 25 Anzac Day (Austra- lia, New Zealand) Hubble Telescope launched, 1990 World Penguin Day R FRIDAY SATURDAY 14 15 SUNDAY 16 Space Shuttle Colum- bia First Launched Crewed by John Young and Robert Crippen - 1981 3rd President Thomas Jefferson born, 1743 Lee Bennett Hopkins born, 1938 Titanic Struck an ice- berg shortly before midnight on April 14, then sinking. Income Tax Day Artist/Inventor Leon- ardo Da Vinci born, 1452 Easter Garth Williams born, 1912 Aviator Wilbur Wright born, 1867 19 20 21 22 23 Humorous Day Revolutionary War began (1775) Scientists Marie & Pierre Curie isolate radium (1902) Kindergarten Day Barbara Park born, 1947 Earth Day estab- lished 1970 Girl Scout Leader Appreciation Day Home Run Day, Hank Aaron hits his first home run in 1954. William Shakespeare born, 1564 26 27 28 29 30 Administrative Pro- fessionals/ Secretar- ies Day Hug a Friend Day National Pretzel Day Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day Take Our Daughters to Work Day Tell a Story Day Arbor Day James Monroe born, 1758 (5th Presi- dent) Zipper Day (patented by Gideon Sund- back in 1913) National Honesty Day Anniversary Lou- isiana Purchase completed (1803)