Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options

A table spread with the components of Thanksgiving dinner, with the White House as a backdrop, set the scene on Nov. 19 for what will turn out to be a last-minute pitch to the president to protect some of the nation's 11 million immigrants who are in the country illegally.

Shortly before the White House said President Barack Obama would announce executive actions on immigration the following day, advocates for immigration reform set a folding table in the middle of Pennsylvania Avenue and covered it with vegetables, fruit, bread and two frozen turkeys.

San Juana Marquez, who works in a poultry processing plant in North Carolina, stood at a podium surrounded by the bounty and described how her family would be disrupted if she should be deported to her home state of Guerrero, Mexico.

"You know about the violence there," she began. If she were forced to leave, she would leave her children behind—the youngest ones are U.S. citizens—and they would be sent to foster care. "It would be too dangerous to take them back to Guerrero, where children and the elderly are gunned down in gang violence."

She and other farm and poultry workers from around the country pleaded with Obama to "stop the deportations—let us work and let us keep our children safe."

The speakers, including U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Illinois, and Arturo Rodriguez, president of the United Farm Workers union, focused on the role of immigrants—those with documents and those without—in putting food on Americans' tables.

Rodriguez said the "protracted political debates and the partial solutions offered by House Republicans ... ignore the inconvenient truth that America's food will continue to come to our tables through the toil and exploitation of undocumented farmworkers who do the work that no one else is doing."

With a holiday focusing on gratitude approaching, he said, "it's time to give thanks to our Thanksgiving workers by simply extending to them meaningful action that says, 'If you harvest our food, you're welcome at the table.'"

Another farm worker, Maria Martha Acevedo Cardenas, a pumpkin grower from Sunnyside, Washington, said farmworkers need immigration reform to help ensure their fair wages and fair treatment.

"I'm not asking for pity, but I am asking for what's fair," she said. She and other farmworkers "are unable to afford the same fruits and vegetables we picked. One day, I would like to be able to buy my own Thanksgiving turkey."

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

"Magdalene: I am the utterance of my name" is advocating for setting the record straight on one of Christianity’s most vital disciples.
Michael O’BrienJune 28, 2024
This week on “Jesuitical,” Zac and Ashley struggle to resist the temptation to “type” each other as they learn about the Enneagram from Liz Orr, author of “The Unfiltered Enneagram: A Witty and Wise Guide to Self-Compassion.”
JesuiticalJune 28, 2024
Former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden participate in their first U.S. presidential campaign debate in Atlanta June 27, 2024. (OSV News photo/Brian Snyder, Reuters)
Keeping President Biden on the ballot is like telling voters: “Trust us. Don’t believe your eyes and ears.”
Many watching last night’s debate wondered if this was the end for Joe Biden. But I could not help but wonder if this was the end of presidential debates.