Nearly fifty DePaul students approached St. Nicholas of Tolentine Church Saturday morning in a unison chant: "Education not deportation! Education not deportation!" Ross Richmond, Student Government Association President, and Pamela Barrientos shouted through megaphones, leading the march.St. Nicholas of Tolentine was the site of the New Americans Rally, an assembly for support of the Illinois DREAM Act, which will be voted on in the Illinois Senate on May 4. The rally was organized by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.Fr. Dennis Holtschneider, president of DePaul University said, "This is a critical point and day because this is when you bring elected officials into the room and they see the support for the legislation they're about to vote on. Today is the final push."
Around a thousand people packed inside the church to support the legislature. Chants erupted in every direction even before the scheduled speakers took the stage to the rhythm of hands-clapping and feet-pounding. Students waved signs that read "America was discovered by immigrants," "One Nation One Dream," and "Somos America." DePaul students, the largest of any college group attending, stood out in the crowd in royal blue T-shirts with "DePaul University Supports the DREAM Act" written on the back in bold white letters.
The rally opened with three prayers, one of which was delivered by Fr. Holtschneider. In the prayer, Holtschneider urged that we try to "see the world through other people's eyes."
Among the rally's speakers were Holtschneider, University of Illinois President Mike Hogan, Lake County Sheriff Mark Curran, Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives Michael Madigan, and Illinois Senate President John Cullerton. U.S. senator Dick Durbin, the chief sponsor of the federal DREAM Act, planned to attend, but canceled due flooding in southern Illinois.
Madigan's address focused on the promise of the American dream.
"If we work together, if we keep our eye on the ball, if we stay focused, then we will fulfill the one nation, one dream platform," Madigan said to the rousing applause of the impassioned congregation.
"If we work together, there will be an Illinois DREAM Act that will be the modern implementation of the promise of America," Madigan said.
Cullerton emphasized the importance of the choice of higher education.
"I'm here to share support for what I believe is nothing more than providing the basic choice for a population of young people here in Illinois," Cullerton said. Cullerton said undocumented children were not give the choice to come to the U.S., but the law still limits their choice and denies them basic opportunities.
Hogan said the Illinois DREAM Act is more than a small step in the right direction for immigration reform and that no student should be denied financial aid because of outdated laws.The Illinois DREAM Act would create private scholarships and open up other financial opportunities for undocumented students, encourage high school counselors to be trained in educational opportunities for immigrant youth, and enable undocumented students to get driver's licenses. The ICIRR estimates 65 percent of youths that would benefit from the act come from households that earn below 200 percent of the poverty line.
Another speaker detailed the horrors her family is currently enduring as her husband is preparing to be deported. Through a translator, she said, "Enough is enough. Stop separating families."
An undocumented high school senior also spoke. The senior has been accepted to three colleges, but can't afford tuition, something the Illinois DREAM Act would like to fix. The senior said the DREAM Act would break down the walls that keep undocumented students from their full potential.
Richmond said, "The rally showed how strong our collective voice can be when we come from all different places in Chicago and support the DREAM Act."
Universities from across Chicago were represented at the New Americans Rally, including DePaul,University of Illinois at Chicago, Northwestern, Loyola, Dominican, Roosevelt, and University of Chicago.Richmond said he was most impressed with the representatives' ability to voice the goals of those in favor of the DREAM Act and make a solid commitment to bring those goals to Springfield for the vote on May 4.
Richmond said, "The Illinois DREAM Act is really important because on a state level it says these people are valuable in our society and we need to allow them to get higher education so they can then be able to contribute back to society." Richmond says the Illinois DREAM Act is important for DePaul because the university's mission is to make higher education accessible and affordable to all students.
"This is a small piece of Illinois doing its part, but it's going to have to be followed by the national DREAM Act or people are still going to be deported," Holtschneider said.The DREAM Act was originally federal legislation, first introduced in 2001 and most recently defeated last December. The federal version would enable undocumented students to earn legal status by earning a two or four year degree from a higher education institution, or by serving in the military for two years. The ICIRR estimates that 95,000 Illinois youth would have benefitted if the DREAM Act had passed in December.
Following the rally, the DePaul students quickly turned their attention to the Illinois Senate vote on May 4. A bus will leave from Lincoln Park and take DePaul students and others to Springfield in the morning on May 4 to continue supporting the Illinois DREAM Act.The rally "brought a lot of solidarity to the movement. I think that a lot of people gained energy and are ready to vote and go down to Springfield on Wednesday," Rachelle Snyder, Kindergarten co-teacher and DePaul alumni said.Sophomore Secondary Education major Nicole Arroyo said, "The energy was really positive, I hope we made an impact and when we go to Springfield on Wednesday that we pass the Illinois DREAM Act."
DePaul's participation in the New Americans Rally was organized by a coalition of DALE, the DePaul Alliance for Latino Empowerment and Student Government Association members. The event was advertised on Facebook. The coalition contacted the DePaul administration for support. Fr. Holtschneider funded the group's T-shirts. The Office of Mission and Values funded the buses that transported the students from Lincoln Park to the church.