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Attacks against Immigrants attacks Black America
Attacks against Immigrants attacks Black America
By Eric K. Ward
I’m African-American and my family moved to California almost a hundred years ago after a
lynching took place outside their hometown in Kentucky.
I’m also undocumented, or in the current anti-immigrant vernacular, “illegal.” I don’t
have the necessary documents to prove my identity. Therefore, within four years, I won’t
be able to vote, have access to social services, or receive state identification to
travel.
Let’s start from the beginning:
In May 2006, I lost my passport and Social Security card at Seattle-Tacoma International
Airport (I don’t have a driver’s license because of a visual disability). When I went
home to Chicago, I learned that in order to receive a state identification card, I needed
to obtain a certified copy of my birth certificate, which allows me to apply for a Social
Security Card to replace my passport.
Later in the week I contacted the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder and was told that
in order to receive my birth certificate, I needed to present a copy of my passport, or
driver’s license, to verify I was, in actuality, Eric K. Ward.
Since it was obvious, after twenty minutes of discussion, that I didn’t own a driver’s
license, a passport, or a social security card, they told me to fill out the proper forms
in front of a notary public in Chicago. I quickly opened the phone book and had a
co-worker drive me to a notary public. But when I got there, the notary public said I
needed a passport, social security card, or driver’s license to receive an official
notary seal.
Lucky for me (when I’m in a pinch) I can become very persuasive. And since I had a number
of newspaper articles with photos documenting my identity, the notary public accepted my
articles with somewhat dubious satisfaction. Next, before anyone could change their
minds, I walked next door to the Post Office and happily mailed my documents to the Los
Angeles County Registrar-Recorder and went on with my life.
Four weeks later my birth certificate arrived!
But when I arrived at the Post Office to pick it up, the attendant asked me to produce a
passport, driver’s license and, most ironically, a copy of my birth certificate to obtain
my birth certificate. After waiting an hour and pleading with two supervisors, I‘m proud
to say that I now possess a certified birth certificate!
I wish I could say everything went smoothly from this point on, but the adventure only
began and came to a screeching halt within a week.
A few days later I headed to the Social Security Administration to obtain a replacement
social security card. But when I got there, the Social Security Administration said I
needed more than just a copy of my birth certificate. They said I also needed a passport,
driver’s license, or state identification card to prove my identity.
But since I went to the Social Security Administration to obtain a new copy of my social
security card so I could get a new passport, the Social Security Administration didn’t
know what to do with me. So, they told me to head across town to the Illinois Secretary
of State’s office to get my social security card. But when I arrived, the Illinois
Secretary of State’s office said I needed my social security card to obtain any official
document to prove my identity.
Now I’m stuck in a Catch-22 and I’m not alone in this predicament. Almost nine percent of
African Americans (18 or older) are unable to document their citizenship. * Roughly 2
million African Americans, eleven million native born citizens, and nearly twice as many
low income Americans than citizens with higher incomes don’t have a social security card,
driver’s licenses, passport, birth certificate or proof of naturalization. *
In 1950, Sam Shapiro, now Emeritus Professor of Health Policy and Management at the Johns
Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, conducted a case study for the journal
Population Studies, and also found that, due to segregation barring black children from
being born in white hospitals, one-fifth of African Americans born between 1939-40 were
never issued birth certificates.
When you correlate Shapiro’s figures to the 2000 US Census Data on African American
Population by Age, Shapiro’s figures show that by 2010, nearly half-a-million elderly
African Americans born before 1941 may loose their right to vote and access to federal
services. Remember, this is only for African Americans born before 1941!
Most recently, Tim Vercelloti, a professor at Rutgers University, found that 5.7% of
African Americans are less likely to vote in states that require voter identification.
And let’s not forget, voting is a right African Americans struggled to secure for all
American citizens.
If U. S citizens don’t have the “required” documents to prove their identity, an
increasingly large portion of U.S. citizens will be denied access to social services and
the right to vote at the federal, state, and local level.
For example, in 2006, officials in Maricopa County, Arizona denied almost 5,000 US
citizens the right to vote because they didn’t have the “required” documents. In 2005,
The Draft Reduction Act denied anyone re-applying for Medicaid who didn’t posses the same
“required” documents. And by 2010, the Federal Election Integrity Act (passed in 2006)
will deny all American citizens the right to vote if they’re can’t produce the “required”
documents.
What are the “required” documents? You guessed it: a passport, birth certificate or proof
of naturalization.
Why is this happening?
Strict ID requirements that target immigrant and refugee communities also target African
Americans, poor, and elderly communities. Federal, state, and local laws that attack
undocumented immigrants and refugees threaten Americans’ voting rights, the right to
travel without fear of imprisonment, and access to social services.
Anti-immigrant activists say strict ID requirements are a necessary burden that folks
should be happy to shoulder in the fight against “illegal” immigration. But that’s pretty
easy to say when you’re not African American, poor, or a member of the elderly community.
As African Americans we should be deeply concerned about the ongoing attack on immigrants
and refugees. Why?
We know what it’s like to be second-class citizens---and it’s about to happen again.
ERIC K. WARD is National Field Director for the Center for New Community, a national civil rights organization based in Chicago. For over 20 years Eric has successfully assisted communities around the U.S. in responding to assaults on democracy by groups like the Aryan Nations, the Wise Use Movement, and the Christian Right.

Attacks against Immigrants attacks Black America
I think folks are not well informed these rules on I.D. requirements are for Americans only as the same thing happen to me a white American. If you are a Mexican illegaly here all you need is a Mexico I.D. and proof of residing in CA to get Welfare.