Heartwarming story for the day: refugees given little farm plots in Massachusetts

This is a nice story, from the Worcester, MA, Telegram. For once there doesn’t seem to be a hidden dark side. (If there is, someone from the area can let us know.)

 In her native Democratic Republic of the Congo, Christine Kindeke and her family always grew their own food.

“In the Congo, most of the income of a family comes from farming,” she said. The knowledge of how to farm, when to plant a particular crop and what methods work best from year to year is passed down from parent to child.

But when she arrived in the United States as a refugee several years ago, that connection to the earth was broken. Living first in New Hampshire and later in Worcester, she had no way to plant the seeds that she had brought with her from Congo. The seeds are from a spinach-like vegetable called biteku-teku in Kikongo, her native tongue.

Last year, she planted those seeds in a small community garden in front of Goddard School of Science and Technology, and harvested a good crop. This year, she has bigger plans.

In a project that seems to be privately funded, a farmer is leasing four acres to Lutheran Social Services.

Quarter-acre plots will go to individual refugees who have shown success in community gardens, while half-acre lots will go to groups of refugees from particular countries, such as Bhutan, Myanmar (Burma), Iraq, Burundi and Democratic Republic of the Congo.

A group called the Massachusetts Society for Promoting Agriculture is funding this with a $10,000 grant. I looked it up to make sure it’s not government-funded, and found an interesting story. Its home page says this:

The M.S.P.A. was founded by concerned citizens, one of whom was Samuel Adams.

In the years following the Revolutionary War, the Commonwealth was struggling with the suspension of profitable industries, destruction of property and heavy taxation. It became evident to the founders that the only present and available wealth lay in agriculture, the primary source of all wealth.

They sought to promote the study and improvement of agriculture by giving “handsome premiums to the men of enterprise who have by their inquiries made useful discoveries and communicated them to the public.” (Petition for Incorporation, March 1792).

So far, I like this project and this organization. Here’s another grant they gave:

A grant allowed a group of entry-level immigrant farmers to buy equipment to insure their success in their fields and at farmer’s markets thus providing a steady income and role-modeling for upwards of forty families.

That’s local involvement at its best.

Dominican Priest: We can’t handle 100,000 Haitian refugees

I was hoping to write about something other than Haiti this morning, but it seems there is no escaping the Haitian refugee issue—it is everywhere in every alert on refugees.   This is a short article that says that the International Organization for Migration (IOM), by the way largely funded by US taxpayers, wants to set up a refugee camp in the Dominican Republic.   A priest implied it would drag down the Dominican Republic and commenters mostly blasted him.

One commenter (one of those leftist faux humanitarians) wants to poke his eyes out for giving a rational suggestion.   Don’t you just love it when those people who demand everyone be kind and generous are the meanest SOB’s themselves.   But, I digress, here is the article from Dominican Today about the Priest and what he said:

SANTO DOMINGO. – The charity organization Dominican Border Solidarity, characterized for the defense of human rights of Haitians immigrants in the Dominican Republic, opposes the International Organization for Migrations’ (OIM)[IOM] alleged attempt to build in this country a refugee camp to house 100,000 victims of Haiti’s quake.

The Jesuit priest Regino Martinez, Solidarity coordinator, said there are enough places in Haiti to shelter people in the camp which the IMO [IOM] proposes.

He said the Dominican Government has supported the Haitian people with solidarity after the catastrophe and the help for Haitians to respond to their calamity, but in their own country, is the effort which should prevail for now.

All of the commenters however did not criticize the Dominican.   A commenter named NegroDeLaBachata from Stuttgart, Germany had a whole series of good suggestions and comments, including this one:

As far as camps go, set them up in Haiti. There’s sufficient room for this. Haiti has 10 states, nearly 11,000 sq. miles. There’s plenty of room to set up tent cities where the international community can care for the survivors of the quake, evacuate the capital if deemed necessary, and organize the rebuilding of the Haitian capital. There is absolutely no reason that Haitians need to evacuate Haiti.

Makes sense to me!

Not happening (at the moment)! Thousands of Haitian orphans not coming to Florida

I reported the other day that the Catholic Church in Florida was eager to repeat the controversial 1960’s  Operation Pedro Pan and airlift thousands of “orphans” from Haiti to Florida.

According to the Miami Herald, it isn’t going to happen.  The Haitian government wants to keep its kids!

Florida is unlikely to see a wave of Haitian children orphaned by last week’s killer earthquake, as Haitian and U.S. leaders do not favor a recreation of the famed 1960s Pedro Pan effort that rescued thousands of children from communist Cuba, the state’s top social service administrator said Tuesday.

“The Haitian civil government is starting to reemerge,” said Florida Department of Children & Families Secretary George Sheldon, who has been meeting with state, county and federal leaders for several days to coordinate refugee resettlement efforts.

“The desire of the Haitian people, to the extent that this can be done, is for the children to be cared for in Haiti,” Sheldon added. “That is their preference.”

Florida and U.S. government leaders, Sheldon added, are also reluctant to airlift hundreds or thousands of orphans because of concerns that children who lived through the earthquake may be too fragile to withstand being uprooted from their homeland.

“These children who have gone through the earthquake have suffered a tremendous trauma,” Sheldon said. “To move them now to a foreign country where they don’t speak the language and do not have families would be to re-traumatize them.

Mary Ross Agosta, a spokeswoman for the Archdiocese of Miami, reiterated the Catholic church’s offer to help spearhead a Pedro Pan-like rescue effort. 

Supposedly only kids that were previously (before the earthquake) assigned to American adoptive parents can leave, see my previous post here for details.

Currently, only children with valid adoption papers or in the process of being adopted by a U.S. family are entering the United States, Homeland Security officials said.

One flight carrying 54 children bound for adoptive families in Pennsylvania landed at Orlando Sanford International Airport early Tuesday before departing for Pittsburgh at about 7 a.m., Sheldon said. The children had been living in an orphanage run by two Pittsburgh-area sisters.

Another flight with 16 children landed in Port St. Lucie, Sheldon said. The children will remain in the Treasure Coast overnight as they await their prospective parents.

The Miami Herald references Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell’s potentially precedent-setting trip to Haiti where he brought 53 orphans to Pittsburgh* of all places.   How many other attention-getting gambits will we see from politicians now that Rendell has done it?  And, check this out, I never would have believed it, but CNN’s Anderson Cooper criticized the Rendell rescue, here.

Currently, only children with valid adoption papers or in the process of being adopted by a U.S. family are entering the United States, Homeland Security officials said.

One flight carrying 54 children bound for adoptive families in Pennsylvania landed at Orlando Sanford International Airport early Tuesday before departing for Pittsburgh at about 7 a.m., Sheldon said. The children had been living in an orphanage run by two Pittsburgh-area sisters.

Another flight with 16 children landed in Port St. Lucie, Sheldon said. The children will remain in the Treasure Coast overnight as they await their prospective parents.

At least someone is making sense!    US Ambassador Kenneth Merten said we need to be sure that in our eagerness to scoop up the “orphans” we don’t separate children from their families.

U.S. Ambassador Kenneth Merten said the U.S. Embassy in Haiti is spending a lot of time processing adoption papers for orphans.

“We are trying to move legitimate orphans out of here as fast as we possibly can,” he said. “We need to get Haitian government authority for that, but . . . people need to understand we are trying to protect adoptive parents in the United States to make sure the child that ends up on their doorsteps . . . is the child they have developed a relationship with down here.”

He said the embassy also is trying to ensure children aren’t mistakenly separated from their parents and labeled as orphans.

That is it for today, check back tomorrow to see if the Obama Administration has caved.  You can bet they are being lobbied by the Left (the Religious Left too!) to reverse themselves and open the flood gates.

* Pittsburgh!  We have written many posts in recent months about how Pittsburgh is overloaded with refugees, some being evicted from apartments.  Refugee agencies there are already overwhelmed.  Here is just one of many posts on the subject.

Socialist publication: US Military taking over Haiti, refugees to be imprisoned

While most Americans are proud of the US military for stepping into the void in Haiti, and American families watch loved ones leave home with only a couple days of notice to risk their lives in filth and chaos.    And, while all the news is filled with warm and fuzzy stories of American school children collecting pennies for the kids of Haiti, the World Socialist Web Site, a Socialist (really Marxist?) rag, is saying it is all about US imperialism and a plan to take over Haiti!   Hey WSWS, most Americans don’t want Haiti!  

The US military intervention in Haiti is criminal in both form and content. Disguised as a humanitarian rescue operation, its main aim is to build up the necessary firepower to terrorize the masses into accepting a shocking lack of treatment without protest. Even taken on its own terms, the US occupation of Haiti has not taken the opportunities available to it to treat wounded Haitians.

This operation recalls the March 1993 US intervention in Somalia, when US forces invaded that strategically-located country, supposedly to help relieve famine. US forces were soon deeply entangled in civil war and hated by the population, leading up to a shoot-out between US forces and civilians in Mogadishu. Current US operations in Haiti are preparing similar confrontations with the population.

The rescue efforts in Haiti are held hostage by a US national security establishment that is completely impervious to popular sympathy for the victims of the earthquake, and unanswerable to the masses—of Haiti or any other country, including the US itself. Instead, as the death toll mounts, there is an unspoken but unanimous agreement in the international media that it is legitimate for the US military to dictate how operations will proceed.

And, if that is not enough they go on to say we are going to imprison refugees.  Let me tell you WSWS, a large portion of the American public thinks it’s o.k. to help Haitians where they live in the initial humanitarian rescue phase, but they needn’t come here.  Believe it or not, we don’t need more cheap labor.   Another large portion of the American public also thinks we ought to be rebuilding Detroit before we rebuild Port au Prince.

US officials are also warning Haitians that, if they try to flee from Haiti to the US, they will be deported back to Haiti. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said: “There may be an impulse to leave the island to come here. You will not qualify for TPS [Temporary Protected] status.” This would allow the US to deport them upon arrival.

Officials in Miami, a city with a large Haitian immigrant population, are watching for signs of a mass flght from Haiti to the US. Democratic Representative Kendrick B. Meek noted, “The entire community is emotionally attached to Haiti, and it’s been rough,” adding that Haitian-Americans form the bulk of the workforce for many major employers in the region. However, officials are preparing prisons for potential Haitian refugees.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced that it would move 400 detainees from the Krome detention facility to an undisclosed location, to free up space in case any Haitians manage to reach US shores.

Most Americans agree that would be a prudent thing to do, even the Socialist-leaning Obama Administration knows that.

When the average American sees this attack on our generosity, the reaction is probably similar to mine—o.k. Socialists of the world just hussle yourselves to Haiti and take care of the mess and leave America alone!

Readers: It looks like Haitian refugee issues will be with us for a long time, so I’m making a new category for Haiti.   I’ll go back shortly and be sure all the posts we’ve previously written on the subject are placed in the category for your review.

Maybe Temporary Protected Status for Haitians has not yet been approved by the Administration

Update:  It is definite, TPS has been granted as of this past Tuesday, here.

A couple of days ago I reported that it had been approved, but I might be wrong.  This article, granted it’s a couple of days old, says that the Obama Administration only halted deportations of illegal Haitians and had not yet decided on TPS.  Note that it looks like New York Senator Gillibrand is behind this one.   From The Hill:

New York Sen.Kirsten Gillibrand (D), whose state contains one of the nation’s highest Haitian populations, called on the Obama administration to grant Haitian nationals in the U.S. temporary protected status (TPS) so that they are not made to return to their home country.

The Department of Homeland Security halted deportations to Haiti on Wednesday, but an official told The Hill that TPS remains “within the range of consideration.”

Has anyone seen anything official about Temporary Protected Status for Haitians?