Haitians headed out in boats

Update March 31st:  Jamaica repatriated this group of Haitians, here.

I haven’t followed the Haitian issue closely lately so I’m not sure if this is the first report of Haitians taking to boats since the January earthquake or not.  60 have been reported now landing in Portland, Jamaica, from Radio Jamaica here.  Floridians might start scanning the horizons!

Boston area schools (and students!) suffer with influx of Haitian students

I haven’t posted anything on the Haitian refugee issue lately, so thought this article from the Boston Globe would serve as an update.  As is often the case, be sure to check the comments because they are often much more interesting than the story itself.

In the past month or so, hundreds of children from the Caribbean’s poorest nation have enrolled in local schools, challenging teachers to provide support for children struggling to learn English, to adapt to winter, and to make sense of what has become of their lives.

Boston public schools have enrolled at least 99 students from Haiti since the massive earthquake left more than 200,000 dead, some 300,000 injured, and 1 million homeless, according to government estimates. By last week, at least 98 students from Haiti had registered in Brockton, 36 students began classes in Randolph, and 11 were studying in Somerville.

All the districts, though already overcrowded, expect to receive more students in the coming months.

“These are wonderful children who are remarkably resilient, but they need special attention,’’ said Elie Jean-Louis, principal of the Charles H. Taylor Elementary School in Mattapan, where at least 25 Haitian students have enrolled since the earthquake. “They may not understand what they have been through and don’t know what emotions they are carrying inside.’’

Despite the additional financial burdens, state officials have said no money is available to help schools, some of which have had to hire Haitian Creole-speaking staff, offer additional counseling, and open new classes.

School officials said they do not check the immigration status of students and are required to enroll any child whose guardian or relative shows a driver’s license or another document that proves they live in the district. They said some of the students were born in the United States and are US citizens, while others are here on a tourist visa.

In a memo sent to schools last month, Mitchell D. Chester, commissioner of the state Elementary and Secondary Education Department, advised superintendents that “a school-aged child or youth displaced by the earthquake in Haiti and who is now residing in the USA as a doubled-up or homeless unaccompanied youth has the right to enroll immediately in the district of residence.’’

A district would follow the same procedures it would with a child displaced by a domestic natural disaster, Chester said.

Asked whether state officials would offer financial help to districts getting the most students from Haiti, JC Considine, a spokesman for Chester, said he is “not aware of any additional state financial assistance for schools that are enrolling Haitian refugees.’’

Many of those schools already have large populations of Haitian-born students, and they say they are doing their best, despite their limited resources.

In Randolph, Superintendent Richard H. Silverman said the additional students have come as the district faces a budget shortfall of more than $2 million, has cut every school program by at least 10 percent, and plans to eliminate as many as 15 teaching positions. He said each new student costs the district about $10,000.

“We don’t have sufficient funds to operate appropriately as it is, and we’re already in real danger of making significant and damaging cuts to the system,’’ Silverman said. “But we have the obligation to meet the needs of any student who lives in Randolph and comes to our doors, and we’ll do that.’’

[…..]

At Ashfield Middle School in Brockton, principal Barbara Lovell has received at least 29 new Haitian students since the earthquake, doubling the size of some of the English immersion classes.

Lovell has had to open new classrooms in a modular building, bring special education teachers into classes, and ask teachers to work extra hours as they try to serve students with different needs.

“This is very difficult,’’ she said. “The entire school has seen an impact. It’s taxing, tiring, and exhausting for a lot of teachers. The teachers are terrific, but when you’re translating and helping students who don’t speak English, it’s hard. They’re not trained for that.’’

This article reminded me of the comment we received from Winooski, VT recently where a parent said the overload of refugees in that town was keeping his/her child from moving ahead with his education.  May I suggest homeschooling!

For more on Haitian refugees visit our Haiti category, here.

Reporters have no idea how religion affects anything, but it affects everything

Refugee Resettlement Watch has been interested in diversity from the beginning — we have a long page devoted to it with articles and commentary copied out, and linked in most cases. We post on it from time to time because diversity is an ideology that governs a great deal of what goes on in the United States. That is, the idea that multiculturalism and diversity of race, nationality and gender are the rightful goals of public policy in areas such as education, the workplace, the military, residency, and . . . you can think of dozens more areas.

We’ve often commented on the difficulties some refugees have getting along in the United States because their culture is so different. Ann has recently posted on the Burmese in Fort Wayne and Iraqi refugees in general. I don’t know if the resettlement agencies — the volags — are oblivious to the problem or if they understand it and like the idea of fomenting discord and showing up Americans as “racists” for objecting to the destruction of their communities. I think it’s clearer in the case of the media reports on refugees, most of which are remarkably similar in their cheerfulness and their obliviousness to problems.  

Rod Dreher has a piece in USA Today that addresses this media phenomenon well, called Studying voodoo isn’t a judgment. The subtitle, “Journalists should deal with religion respectfully, of course. But that doesn’t mean dismissing the tough questions,” summarizes it well. He begins by talking about the way the media, in reporting on Haiti, either ignore voodoo or act as if criticizing it is taboo. Here’s his first paragraph:

Did you hear about the Protestant minister who said that Haiti “has been in bondage to the devil for four generations”? No, it wasn’t Pat Robertson but Chavannes Jeune, a popular Evangelical pastor in Haiti who has long crusaded to cleanse his nation of what he believes is an ancestral voodoo curse. It turns out that more than a few Haitians agree with Jeune and Robertson that their nation’s crushing problems are caused by, yes, voodoo.

How does voodoo cause these problems? It’s logical, when it’s explained:

[On a blog], there’s a fascinating piece by Wesleyan University religion professor Elizabeth McAlister touching on how the voodoo worldview affects Haiti’s cultural and political economy. She writes that the widespread belief that events happen because of secret pacts with gods and spirits perpetuates “the idea that real, causal power operates in a hidden realm, and that invisible powers explain material conditions and events.” Though McAlister is largely sympathetic to voodoo practitioners, she acknowledges that any effective attempt to relieve and rebuild Haiti will contend with that social reality.

So if your religion tells you that your actions have no effect, because everything is caused by forces beyond your knowledge or control, do you think that might have a real-world consequence? Like, maybe, not making much effort?

But this kind of analysis is out of line, according to the New York Times.

In a recent New York Times column, religion reporter Samuel G. Freedman rightly lamented the way the American news media have largely ignored voodoo in their Haiti earthquake reporting. But he also chided media commentators (including me) for speculating about voodoo as a harmful cultural force. Freedman quoted academics who praised the Haitian folk religion, and who complained about the ignorance and supposed racism of voodoo skeptics.

This, alas, is all too typical of American media’s religion coverage. We journalists ignore or downplay the role religion plays in the everyday life, or we take a naive viewpoint toward exotic religions practiced by people unlike us.

And Dreher makes the connection that jumps out at me, and would jump out at any sensible person who is not wearing PC blinders:

For years, I’ve watched this instinct show itself in the way most in the mainstream media cover Islam in America. Reporters are eager to find positive stories and often allergic to stories that might, in their minds, give aid and comfort to rednecks, right-wingers and other so-called undesirables. Once I attended a news meeting in which an editor angrily declined to look into substantive evidence that local Muslim institutions were teaching Islamic radicalism to youth by barking, “What about Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson?! We never write about their radicalism!”

This instinct accounts for much of the reporting we criticize here at RRW. It has disastrous consequences in some cases — the example Dreher gives in the above paragraph, and the failure of most of the media to report honestly on problems with Somalis wherever they settle. It was probably such an unwillingness to criticize an “exotic” culture and religion that kept reporters from learning about the radicalization of Somali young men in Minneapolis, until they actually went off to join al-Shabab in Somalia and actively joined the jihad. And it has prevented local reporters, with a few honorable exceptions, from delving into the problems Somalis and other groups cause in the towns where they settle. As Rod Dreher says, of the example he gives above,

As if the Christian televangelists were comparable to Osama bin Laden. As if they were even relevant. The story — an important one — never was written. In that case, an editor who knew little about religion interpreted religious data through a partisan culture-war lens. He chose by omission not to give the newspaper’s readers a picture of the world as it is, but rather of the world as he wishes it were.

What a putdown of other cultures and religions this attitude is. They are used simply as weapons in the culture war, not taken seriously as systems of thought that form the worldview of actual people. As Dreher puts it:

… time and time again I’ve seen journalists who fail to get the dictum set down by the indispensable media criticism blog GetReligion.org: “It’s impossible for journalists to understand how things work in the real world if they do not take religion seriously.”

Here’s why. In his influential 1948 book Ideas Have Consequences, Richard Weaver identified a person’s “metaphysical dream of the world” — that is, the way the world works at its most basic level — as the foundation of one’s thoughts and conduct. This is the realm of religion — or of no religion at all, because scientific materialism offers its own particular view of the structure of reality.

And his conclusion is exactly right:

A world in which most people believe that reality is governed by the occult caprice of the gods will be a very different place than a world in which people believe events can be explained according to either a Christian or a scientific materialist metaphysic. It’s as legitimate to ask what role voodoo plays in Haiti’s fathomless social troubles as it is to ask the same question about fundamentalist Islam in the Middle East, conservative Christianity in the Bible Belt, or militant atheism in the land of academia. And it’s as necessary.

But if we really paid attention to religious beliefs and how they affect worldview, and by extension, customs, actions and goals, we would have to consider things that are very difficult for those whose religion is multiculturalism — that every culture is as worthy as every other. These things are difficult even for those of us who are simply tolerant of differences and don’t mind having a multiplicity of cultures in our country. The biggest question is: Are there some systems of thought that make it impossible for adherents to live peacably and productively as Americans?

And if so, do people with  such a system of thought change when they get here, or do they present a danger to us? If not a danger, are they so disruptive that they should not be here? In the case of jihadists the answer to the second question is obvious: they should not be here, and if someone here adopts that system of thought — radical Islam, not necessarily Islam — he needs to be watched. In other cases, such as the Burmese, maybe the questions are: What must we do to assure assimilation to the extent that they can live here without cultural conflict? Do we need to limit numbers to avoid disruption? Should we go back to the system Ann often advocates: returning to the refugee model of individual or church sponsors for each family?

Many immigrants who come here with worldviews that are not compatible change over time. Being American is not a religion, but it it traditionally has meant a way of thinking that is strange to much of the world: Taking responsibility for one’s actions, relying on one’s efforts rather than on the government, and living by the rule of law, not raw power, for example. Many immigrants come here because of that way of thinking and the opportunity it brings, wanting to better themselves by their own efforts. Others might come here for other reasons, but adopt it as they live among Americans. I don’t have figures at hand, but I believe that Haitians have been fairly successful here, for example, once they’ve left their toxic environment. Now, with the welfare state, other immigrants come for other reasons. And refugees come here because they are, supposedly, seeking refuge, though many also welcome the opportunity America offers.

But we have a right to discriminate among those who want to come here, and looking at religion and how that forms worldview and actions is a legitimate thing to do. And we have the right to put our own ways above others’ and to insist that people follow a minimum level of behavior. Behavior, not thought; this isn’t about thought control. Yet we have found that some ways of thinking are not compatible with living here peaceably. Such as the belief that America is the Great Satan that needs to be destroyed. Or that the goal of life is to impose Sharia law on America. 

Thanks to Rod Dreher for helping me formulate these thoughts with his provocative article.

ORR wants to expand foster care for refugee children

Maybe because they want more Haitian children to come to the US, kind of a backdoor approach by the Catholic Church? 

Time magazine this week has a story about the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Refugee Resettlement program for so-called “unaccompanied minors” and how the feds are seeking to expand the program.

The U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement, which has 700 refugee children in foster care, has asked states to prepare to foster more international refugee children like Majok, whose parents either have disappeared or been killed by war or natural disaster. The need is heightened by continuing armed conflicts in Africa and recent events such as the earthquake in Haiti.

The request means that Massachusetts and other states must ask more households to open up their homes for foster care or ask existing foster families to take in another refugee child at a time of economic downturn.

[…..]

The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services says 14 states and the District of Columbia, participate in the federal Unaccompanied Refugee Minor Program: Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Washington.

Visit Friends of Refugees!

Although Time magazine not surprisingly gives us wonderful uplifting stories about refugee foster children, Friends of Refugees tells us a shocking tale of how things went wrong with one case involving Lutheran Social Services of North Dakota.   Read it here!

Note that Time reports that these kids are put into foster care with the help of the USCCB and LIRS.   Here is my question:  Why do we need these church middlemen?  You know they are also being paid for whatever role they have.  Why can’t this program be run completely by the feds and the state agency?

In the U.S., states license foster homes with the help of the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Services and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The federal government reimburses states for all costs of the children’s schooling, health care and related expenses. [How much are the church middlemen paid?-ed]

Learn all you need to know to get legal immigration status for Haitians

That’s right, for a flat price of $99 you can participate in a phone seminar to learn all the inside skinny on how to get Haitians Temporary Protected Status.  The seminar announced today at Immigration Daily appears to be geared to lawyers in the immigration industry who are working all the angles on Haitians.

Here is one question on the agenda that I would like to know the answer to:

Are Haitian nationals fleeing Haiti being granted refugee status in the U.S?