We Are All Immigrants Here

Yesterday, April 9th, was a spectacular spring day
in Boston, perfect for baseball, bird watching (in the British
sense) or a protest march. Mired between semesters, at the tattered tail
end of a medical leave and looking for a little action, in our wimpy,
middle-aged way, we decided to attend the Boston iteration of the nation
march for immigration rights.

For the record, your correspondents position on the
question is that we are ALL immigrants and guest workers on Planet Earth,
that in a perfect world everybody would be able to live wherever they
want, and that anything we can do to get closer to that ideal is a good
thing. We’ve always been a nation of grubby immigrants clawing our way
towards the American Dream, and if you don’t like it, move to Canada
or Switzerland. This is America, and its open to all. Love it or leave
it, baby.

But as a Movement, we weren’t expecting much from the
Boston illegal immigrant march. Half a million strong they came out in
Los Angeles, a sea of people, a generational echo of the march to Yazgur’s Farm. Even
more in Texas. However, we expected that the lower level of ethnic homogeneity
and organization in the immigrant population of Boston and the higher level of paranoia
among that population, most of whom are trying very hard to
keep a low profile and not draw attention to their precarious presence
here, would severely limit turnout.

We were not disappointed. We snagged a primo meter just
off Copley Square, and made sure the damn thing was full (having gotten
hit while at a doctor’s appointment in Cambridge a few hours earlier).
The plan was to set out backwards down the march route towards the Boston
Common, where the rally was supposed to form up. Still, we were a bit
early, so we had a smoke and sat in the White Whale for half an hour or so,
reading the New York Times.

Not much to shoot or report on, we thought. But it was
a beautiful day to spend in the part, march or no march, and we had just
pumped 8 quarters into our meter, so we decided to stick around and
see what developed. In the meantime, completely ignoring the repeated
advice of Norma Yvonne, our primary care doctor and our nutritionist, not to mention
dear old Mom, we scurried into the Boston Common McDonalds for a quick #1 Value meal.  Since it
was our first solid sustenance of the day, we scorfed it
down like a hungry hound and hurried back to the scene.

What a difference a few minutes can make! There was
now a colorful, motley crew of hundreds, skipping and jumping around,
wrapped
in flags, hoisting signs, waving banners and shouting stuff in Spanish
and English.

Once the music stopped and the speeches started we got
bored and decided to head back to the White Whale, to feed our meter
and our head, and wait for the main rally at the end of the march, which was scheduled to terminate right
in Copley Square. By the time we left the Common, the crowd had swollen
to several thousand and was becoming, if not feisty, at least raucous.

It was almost six, but Coply Square was still strongly illuminated thanks to
DST, with long shadows of roofs and church spires slanting across the lawns and walkways, when we shook ourself back to the 21st century and got out of the car to see what was going on. The
organizers had set up another temporary stage on one side of the Square,
and a lively pop-reggae beat blasted from a powerful PA. As we crossed
Boyleston St., right in front of the main Boston Public Library, we fell
in with a chattering gaggle of female 30-something  suburban shoppers,
simultaneously weighed down by designer store shopping bags and buoyed
up by the intoxicating scent of spring in the air.

"Look," said one, "There’s a concert in the Square!
Must be the Noontime Concert Series. What day is it?"

"No," answered another, "The free concerts in the Square
are on Wednesday.  Today is Monday.  Must be some special celebration."

Discussion ensued. Some of the ladies wanted to check it out, others
said, why bother? We felt obliged to lend a hand.

"Ladies," we interjected, "Less than a half mile from
here there are 30 thousand enraged, criminal, illegal immigrants. That
godless jungle music is for them, and they are headed for RIGHT WHERE
YOU ARE STANDING!"

They looked at each other, trying to reach a consensus
as to whether we were dangerous or ridiculous, but, seemingly unable
to reach a verdict, hurried off. We crossed the street, alone. In front
of the library, an overweight, high-milage hold-out from the 60’s in a
tie-dyed peasant blouse and strand upon strand of worry beads draped over her ample breast looked us in the eye and asked, "Have you found
Jesus?"

"Didn’t know he was lost," we sneered as we hurried
by.

10 meters further down the sidewalk, there was another
one! This one was a guy, in a long brown sackcloth robe with a rope belt
(he had
that Boston Cardinal thing going) but looking more like Friar Tuck.  He
held up a sign with a single word emblazoned on it in red paint, a word
he also intoned every 15 or 20 seconds or so- "Repent."

"We haven’t even "pented" the first time yet," we informed
him, as we cut across the street, which was clear, as traffic had already
been cut off by the motorcycle cops standing on all the corners.

What is it about a warm spring day and a protest march, we wondered, that brings our every Jesus Freak, acid queen, religious extremist and political whacko in the state?

On the
inner perimeter of the streets around the Square, the satellite trucks
of the major networks and more ambitious local stations had set up. So
far, reporters and tourists clearly outnumbered immigrants.

We got some good shots and movies as the immigrant wave
flooded into the Square, until we noticed that our camera was beeping
because its memory chip was full. We had no idea how long that had been
the case. There was some semi-organized activity taking shape on the
small stage in the Square.

All things considered, we decided to disappear before
more politicians and wannabes started speechifying again.  The White
Whale was poised for the get-away. Five minutes later we were back over
the river, heading to Watertown.

In retrospect, a pleasant protest, if somewhat lacking
in weight of numbers or seriousness. As much as it pains us to admit
it, the French may have us beat in the current season of springtime social
protest.

article from the Boston Globe

3 Responses to “We Are All Immigrants Here”

  1. Mister Goat Says:

    I got there at about 6:30–didn’t leave work until 6:00–and I was quite pleased with the turnout. Maybe it had gotten bigger. Not tens of thousands, but the cops estimated 5000 to 7000,m so it was probably a bit higher than that. And the mood was all the more impressive when one considered that the immigrants there were facing daily demonization in political and media discussion. Could have easily been a very somber, negative kind of thing, but it wasn’t.

    A quick note–if there are Jewish folks who want to support immigrants as Passover begins, click here to sign a petition that’s intended to be published as newpaper ads. It’s being organized by a number of groups, including Tekiah in Boston.

  2. Mister Goat Says:

    I got there at about 6:30–didn’t leave work until 6:00–and I was quite pleased with the turnout. Maybe it had gotten bigger. Not tens of thousands, but the cops estimated 5000 to 7000,m so it was probably a bit higher than that. And the mood was all the more impressive when one considered that the immigrants there were facing daily demonization in political and media discussion. Could have easily been a very somber, negative kind of thing, but it wasn’t.

    A quick note–if there are Jewish folks who want to support immigrants as Passover begins, click here to sign a petition that’s intended to be published as newpaper ads. It’s being organized by a number of groups, including Tekiah in Boston.

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