Immigrant’s Wake

by Paul Bass | October 25, 2006 1:02 PM | | Comments (4)

While hundreds of people viewed the body of a popular police officer, another wake took place in Wooster Square for a Mexican immigrant known by far fewer New Haveners.

A dozen or so friends and relatives visited his open casket at Chapel Street’s Lupoli Brothers Funeral Home Tuesday afternoon, as a crowd many times larger in East Haven said good-bye to popular New Haven police officer Dan Picagli.

The immigrant’s name was Manuel Santiago. He was 36 years old. He joined his brother Basilio Santiago in New Haven five years ago to make more money to send home to his mother in Tlaxcala, Mexico. Manuel lived in Fair Haven near the Chabaso bread bakery on James Street, where he had a maintenance job. He liked soccer and basketball. He kept out of trouble. He worked hard.

And he was here illegally.

A robber stabbed Manuel Santiago to death last week. Santiago was on Ferry Street cashing his paycheck; the robber was waiting. Manuel put up a fight; the robber responded by killing him. It was one more crime in New Haven committed by people who know that immigrants fear contacting the police. Manuel Santiago paid what the president of New Haven’s police union, who’s fighting efforts to encourage immigrants to trust the police and report crimes, calls “the cost of coming in here illegal.”

Manuel’s brother Basilio (pictured) was at the wake. Manuel liked to play and watch sports since their days growing up together in Puebla, Mexico, said Basilio, 37, who works in food prep at Atticus Bookstore CafĂ© on Chapel Street (which is affiliated with Chabaso). They’d play football, soccer, basketball. Here in New Haven, Manuel kept following his favorite soccer team from back home, the Puebla, as well as Brazil’s national team.

“He was a nice person, outgoing, very mellow. He never got into trouble,” said Angel Cintron, a friend of Manuel who supervises drivers at the bakery. (Cintron translated Basilio’s remarks.) People from a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds and nationalities work at Chabaso. “Everybody gets along,” Cintron said.

Friends from the bakery and from St. Rose’s Church on Blatchley Avenue collected the money needed for Manuel’s casket, Basilio said. He was gratified for the support. He said he likes being in America but sometimes feels out of place as an immigrant, viewed with suspicion. “Sometimes as immigrants, we feel left out… embarrassed. You don’t get the respect. You don’t have as many rights. I just want to be treated like anyone else.”

Gene Lupoli, pictured sitting at his desk in the funeral home’s back office, said he has handled wakes for some 15-18 Mexican workers over the past five years. Most were young. Most were victims of crimes. Most died in the past two years. And yes, most were here illegally.

Lupoli disagreed with the police union president on the question of what the “cost” should be for the immigrants to be here. Lupoli agrees with the police chief, the mayor and advocates crafting a new policy under which cops wouldn’t inquire into the immigration status of victims reporting crimes.

“Their lives are being taken because they’re easy prey,” Lupoli said. “These thieves know they won’t go to the police. While [undocumented workers] may be guilty of a federal crime — and it’s a nonviolent crime — or could be guilty of a crime, they’re not reporting a federal crime. They’re giving testimony of a robbery or an assault type issue.”

“Italians, Jews,” Lupoli reflected, ticking off more ethnic groups established in New Haven, “they have jumped ship [in the past to enter the country]. Somehow they’re all legal over time.”

Police have arrested a suspect in Manuel Santiago’s murder. Basilio Santiago said his brother didn’t know his attacker.

Officer Dan Picagli was buried on Wednesday. Manuel Santiago wasn’t. His body will be flown home to Mexico next week.







Comments

Posted by: Deborah Frattini | October 25, 2006 9:24 PM

Paul Bass, I so respect your work! It is edifying to see that someone is noticing the plight of illegal immigrants. I teach a course entitled Literature of the Immigrant and we explore the always-poignant stories of dislocation, isolation, (and perhaps eventual assimilation) of these people who are living and yes, dying among us. Bless Gene Lupoli for caring; thank you for telling us Manuel Santiago's story.

Posted by: Robert Bartholomew | October 27, 2006 11:12 AM

Immanuel Kant -

"The Categorical Imperative":

And in conclusion: it's just that easy. If one contends that any person's innate worth is less than another's then the worth of humanity as a whole and in every case is less for it.

For the more simple minded: you can't have it both ways

Posted by: nfjanette [TypeKey Profile Page] | October 27, 2006 1:59 PM

I'm saddened by Mr. Santiago's death and the pain his family must feel. Crime is crime, no matter who the victim. However, illegal immigrants have made a conscience choice to live in a place in which they will never enjoy the same protection as citizens. They must stop illegally immigrating, and the federal government must figure a way to increase the number of legal immigrants while still protecting the securing and economy of the country.

"Italians, Jews," Lupoli reflected, ticking off more ethnic groups established in New Haven, "they have jumped ship [in the past to enter the country]. Somehow they're all legal over time."

No, most of them were legal immigrants. There were indeed may illegal Irish immigrants (one of my parents was a legal Irish immigrant), but many were fully legal as well.

Note that all of the above groups that successfully integrated into American society did so by learning to speak the language of the country, an important skill that Latino immigrants seem to have less interest in mastering. Of course, we live in a society in which well-intentioned liberals have regrettably facilitated that problem by passing laws that require many government documents to be available in Spanish. So, my question is: why weren't those documents ever required in Italian, Yiddish, and Irish Gaelick? A look at the success rate of learning English between all of the groups will provide the answer.

Posted by: stbngrcs | December 21, 2006 5:33 PM

To NFJANETTE:

"Note that all of the above groups that successfully integrated into American society did so by learning to speak the language of the country, an important skill that Latino immigrants seem to have less interest in mastering."

This is not correct. The previous immigrant waves did not learn English as quickly as you state. Over time the language was learned and not by the first ones to come here, but by their children and their children's children. You are seeing the first of the Latino immigrants here. You cannot find a second generation Latino in this country that does not fluently speak English and is not better integrated then their parents.

You post what is thought to be the truth by many that are not exposed to the reality of immigration. What seems like a strong statement when you wrote it, really is not. Look back and think about those previous immigrants. Was it the first generation that learned and mastered English? That assimilated and contributed fully? Or was it the second and third generations?

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