Leaflets Spark City Hall Confab
by Paul Bass | January 31, 2008 5:17 PM | Permalink | Comments (4)
Alarmed by anti-immigrant leafleting outside black churches, ministers huddled with the mayor Thursday to chart a response.
That response appears aimed to go beyond responding to the suburban-organized group attacking immigrants, to wrestling with divisions existing within New Haven on the subject of new arrivals.
About 30 religious leaders gathered in a second-floor City Hall conference room Thursday morning at the invitation of Mayor John DeStefano and his point person on immigration issues, Kica Matos.
They were responding to leafletting last Sunday outside black churches by “The Community Watchdog Project.” The group is organized largely by white suburban opponents of the city’s immigrant-friendly ID program and other efforts to welcome undocumented immigrants; its leader is Dustin Gold of North Branford. (Gold has said he plans to move into New Haven to help organize a mayoral campaign by former Community Action Agency chief Darnell Goldson.)
Gold’s group enlisted Alan Felder, a black plumber from New Haven and outspoken immigration opponent, to help hand out the leaflets quoting black figures in history who opposed immigration involving other ethnic or racial groups, such as the Chinese. The protesters claimed that the current wave of mostly Latino immigrants steal jobs from black New Haveners.
Click here and here to read two front-page New Haven Register stories this past week that highlighted the group’s work.
The ministers read those articles, too. They weren’t happy about them. The group’s first decision was to arrange to meet with the editors at the New Haven Register, probably this coming Monday.
The assembled group included Father Jim Manship (pictured at the top of the story), who as leader of St. Rose of Lima Church is a leading figure helping Latino immigrants; Father Jose Champagne; Pastor Ted Brooks of Beulah Heights Church; Rabbi Daniel Greer; David Waren of the Anti-Defamation League; Apostle Eugene Brunson; and Rev. Bonita Grubbs. The group also included secular activsts involved in the issue, such as immigrant-rights activst John Lugo, Casa Otonal head Patricia McCann, and Community Mediation chief Charles PIllsbury.
Father Manship said he intends to be part of the meeting with the Register.
“It’s important to sit down with the press as community leaders, to express our unity regardless of our religious, denominational, ethnic backgrounds,” he said. “We’d like to share with the Register what the spirit of our conversation was this morning at this meeting, the depth of our resolve, and that responsible media coverage is important.”
By “responsible,” Manship means coverage that highlights the “unity” and “connectedness” of the city. “We need to call people’s attention to what we’re doing, how we live and work together as a community. We have a long history, sometimes good, sometimes bad — but we don’t do things by pitching one group of people against another. That doesn’t solve anything. History has showed that over and over again.”
“There are many reasons we are divided as a community. We need to put forward extra effort at developing positive relationships,” Bonita Grubbs said.
DeStefano said his role was to act as a convener of the meeting, not a leader of the group. He said he felt a need to bring people together to respond to concern in the community over the leafleting. He was pleased that a “very diverse group… responded strongly.”
The gathering agreed, first of all, that “hate talk and pitting one group versus one another — there’s no place for that here,” DeStefano said.
What also merged from the Thursday discussion, DeStefano said, was a sense that the problem extends beyond a small outside group expressing bigotry. It includes real divisions within different segments of the black community, within the Latino community, and between different ethnic and racial groups, about the impact of immigration.
Participants discussed the “need to recall the passage of other immigrants” in New Haven’s past and overcome negative stereotypes about a new generation of newcomers.
Melissa Bailey helped report this story.
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Comments
Posted by: Edward_H | February 1, 2008 1:42 PM
Any chance of us seeing a copy of said leaflet? The last time the Paul described a leaflet as anti-immigrant it turns out the leafet was against illegal-immigration, not all immigrants.
http://www.newhavenindependent.org/archives/2007/05/immigration_enc.php
Posted by: on whalley | February 1, 2008 2:34 PM
What are you saying Edward? The "Newspeak" semantic game hasn't worked on you yet? :)
Posted by: Dustin W. Gold | February 1, 2008 5:18 PM
Go to our website www.watchdogproject.us. The brochure is located in the bottom left hand column of the page - look for the picture of Frederick Douglass.
It was an educational brochure with quotes from influential African Americans - their thoughts on ILLEGAL immigration.
Posted by: Edward_H | February 3, 2008 11:29 AM
Dustin W Gold
Thanks for the link. Considering Paul's previous reporting on the issue of illegal immigration I definitely wanted to see the content of the flyer myself. After reading the flyer and rereading Paul's description of said flyer I wonder if he:
1)Never saw the flyer and relied on hearsay
2)Saw the flyer but has no concept of the difference between illegal immigration and legal immigration
3)Is purposefully being disingenuous about the content of the flyer for reasons unknown
4)Is purposefully attempting to incite tensions and manipulate emotions by describing the flyer as being against all immigrants, legal and otherwise.
The only quote that could be possibly considered "anti-immigrant" is the quote from Fredrick Douglas since it is unclear as to the status of the Chinese he refers to is.
The two issues I have with the flyer is, firstly, the portion describing certain organizations fighting for the "non-existent" civil rights of illegal aliens. Like it or not, Illegal aliens have pretty much the same rights as a citizen (Freedom of Speech, religion , bear arms and all the rest). Illegal's even have the right to earn minimum wage. Why does the flyer describe these rights as "non-existent"?
Secondly, I do not understand why the flyer describes "our Civil Rights are in jeopardy". Civil Rights are not a zero sum game. How are anyone's civil rights are in jeopardy due to the actions of said groups?
I have searched your website and as of yet have not found any information backing up those particular items in the flyer. If these two statements are not based on any factual information this flyer is almost as misleading as Paul's article
Paul
The group is organized largely by white suburban opponents of the city's immigrant-friendly ID program
What does the skin color of this groups members have to do with their opposition to the ID card program? Should we base our opinions on this group based on race rather than the strength and weaknesses of their arguments? Are out of towners not allowed to protest what they feel is wrong? If so I know of a lot of civil rights marches that would have not had nearly as many participants if this were the case.
Articles like this are the reason journalist barely rate above Members of Congress when it comes to trust
http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/index.asp?PID=688
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