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I am waiting
to board the train in San Diego when I notice the Border Patrol agent
making his way down our line. He stops by each person who looks
“Latino” and asks them to present their legal documents. As the
people standing next to me rummage for their identity papers, I stand
by, angry, embarrassed and ashamed. In that moment, I don’t know
what to say or do to protest.
My mind
suddenly travels back in time. I “remember” what it must have
been like during slavery for Black people who made it to the North. If
they had no papers, they were doomed to live
each day in fear. If they were “legalized” by free papers, they
still always needed these documents, no matter who they were or how old
they were or how long they had lived in their community. These
papers were all that stood between them and being “deported” and
returned to their slave status.
My mind traveled across the ocean to South Africa, to a time not so
long ago when the lives of Africans people in South Africa were
controlled by the dreaded Pass Laws that made it compulsory to carry
papers at all times. Without a pass, they would be considered
“illegal” and could be put in detention. Much like proposed guest
worker programs for immigrants, South African Pass Laws Act specified
where, when, and for how long an African could remain anywhere in his country.

My mind returns
to the present. As the immigrant rights movement is building
momentum nationwide, African Americans debate about where we should
stand on immigration issues – shoulder to shoulder with immigrants, in
direct opposition or on the sidelines. I believe that if we look
just under the surface, we can see that our Black and Brown fates are
deeply intertwined.

As
I am watching a video, Rights on the Line, about the phenomenon of
the vigilante movement along the U.S.- Mexico border, the Minutemen are
on “night patrol,” literally hunting the people trying to cross the
border into the U.S. Dressed in their military garb, with flashlights,
walkie talkies and weapons, the militia freely wield the privilege and
the power of race and their legal status. As I watch them rounding up
frightened men and women, hairs are raised on my arms.
Again, I seem to actually “remember” the plight of runaway slaves, the
fear and desperation they felt as they were tracked and trapped by
white militia and returned to a life where their labor was exploited
and their lives were not in their control. As the Black-Brown
debate continues, I see that we have both
been sources of cheap labor. First, Africans were the slaves required
to perpetuate the globalized economics of the 1700’s known as the
Triangle Trade (slaves, sugar and rum). Today, Latinos are the cheap
labor required for maquiladoras south of the border (outsourced
manufacturing needs of international business), international
agribusiness, and jobs at the lowest rungs of the U.S. economy.
Proposals for guest worker programs only perpetuate this model of
workers without rights or protection. Black and Brown people have far more in common
than we often realize.

Both
Black and Brown are the targets of the racism used to justify
unjust political, economic and social policy. Past and present,
members of the exploited and marginalized communities are portrayed as
different from and less than other Americans. The poison of
racism continues to allow those who are privileged to feel morally
justified as they exploit and dehumanize people who provide “cheap
labor” and simultaneously blame them for their lot in life.
Both Black and Brown share common dreams
of work with dignity, a better life for our families and our children.
Isn’t that why slaves escaped to the North and freed slaves initiated
the Northern Migration? Isn’t that why people from other
countries risk their lives to reach the U.S. today? We all desire
the opportunity to build a life and to be respected and accepted
members of the communities and country where we live.
Black and Brown are not each other’s adversaries; we are natural
allies. The economic and political
forces that doomed millions of Africans to servitude and later to
second class citizenship are the same forces responsible for
unsustainable economic conditions in many foreign countries and the
current migration of people to the U.S. They are the same forces
responsible for conflict over jobs, wages, and economic opportunity in
the U.S., a conflict that results in racism, discrimination and
repressive legislation.

Because issues of labor, immigration and
race are deeply enmeshed, we should be
working together toward solutions that include all of us. We must
(1) protect the rights and dignity of individuals who have come to the
U.S. to work, (2) raise the labor standards and wages on both sides of
the Border through reform of international trade policy, (3) protect
local economies everywhere, rather than allow them to be overwhelmed by
trade agreements favoring international corporations, (4) guarantee
that every U.S. worker has the right and the protection to organize,
and (5) we must organize!
The border
patrol officer is gone. Boarding the train in San Diego, I
remember the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., “We are caught
in an escapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of
destiny.” Black faces…brown faces….human faces…. My heart
feels what my mind all ready knows. The people from
across the border are not the problem. A system of economic
exploitation and racism is the problem. Rather than believing our
interests are in conflict, Black and Brown must stand in unity and work
together to transform this system. There
is ultimately one movement – the movement for human dignity and
opportunity – and I am a part of it.
Eisha Mason
is the Associate Regional Director for the Pacific Southwest Region of
the American Friends Service Committee and co-founder of Soulforce
Trainings. Contact her at: emason@afsc.org.
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