Pensar es más interesante que saber, pero menos interesante que mirar.
Johann Wolfgang Goethe

martes, 17 de abril de 2018

Manuel Durán and the violation of his first amendment right


Manuel Durán is a journalist that worked hard and covered all matters related to Latinos in Memphis. He was detained while documenting a march in Memphis in the context of MLK50 outside 201 Poplar in April 3rd (Link)

It's been a while since I write at this blog and I do it to share a letter written by himself while he is incarcerated in Lousiana in a private federal facility.

Chief Robert Moore from Shelby County collaborates with ICE.
The current administration is now criminalizing our community as a strategy to establish any sort of criminal backgrounds that will affect their chances in the immigration case. Chief Robert Moore from Shelby County is cooperating with ICE honoring and implementing a detention hold that has affected seriously our community. Simple traffic tickets -or dismissed cases like Manuel's- end up in deportation and we need to address this at a local level. 

Memphis Police Department also failed in this case ordering to detain Manuel while he was wearing a press badge and was aside from the march. This MPD officer ordered his detention and the other picture shows Manuel seconds before he was detained.


I've witnessed Manuel's passion for the freedom of speech and his commitment to our community. Please take some time to read this article and stand with us against a broken immigration system (Link)

Help us spread the word and join us fighting against racism and xenophobia. At a local level, we need to ask Chief Robert Moore to stop honoring the immigration hold.
#FreeManuelDuran #ManuelDuran



This is the letter Manuel Duran wrote from the ICE detention facility in Louisiana:

I cannot thank you enough for the support I have received since the moment of my arrest and subsequent transfer and incarceration in Louisiana. This episode of my life has not been easy, but I have taken it as an opportunity to learn first-hand the drama and reality that our families are living when they are arrested by immigration and then deported.

Families like Jorge’s, who is in detention with me. He has been in jail for 3 months; he has three very young children, 4, 5, and 10. One of them has a heart problem. But Jorge will be deported as soon as his trip is allowed by his country’s consulate. He could not fight his case because he could not afford an immigration attorney.

Or Fernando’s, who is 64 years old and has three US citizen children, but has been in detention for the past 7 months and is now about to be deported back to his country, away from his family and everything he knows, after his attorney couldn’t win his case.

Once you’re inside the detention facility it is extremely hard to get the phone number of a private attorney and if you are lucky enough to find one, their fees are unaffordable.

No one should be deprived of their freedoms just for wanting a better future for their children. This is a cruel system that criminalizes people who pose no danger to this country.

My greatest challenge will be to continue working for my people, no matter where I’m at. I could say that my destiny lies now in the hands of an immigration judge in Atlanta. Someone I have never met and someone who does not know my story and I may never be granted the opportunity to tell my story, but my destiny lies in the hands of the judge of judges, and I’m willing to accept His decision.

Through this experience, I have learned first-hand about the treatment immigrants receive before they are deported. How they keep the lights on day and night, so you sleep with a towel over your eyes.

How they randomly make you lie in bed for 45+ minutes for roll call with no breaks to use the bathroom. How they fall to inform you when your attorney calls. How you get paid dimes for work and you are on your own if you have no one outside adding funds to your commissary. How the visitation hours and your recreation hours happen at the time so you must choose between seeing your family and getting some air. How the phones in the visitation room do not work and you must scream through the soundproof windows. I will keep taking notes about my experience and I will keep on collecting my cellmates’ stories while I’m here.

I am so fortunate that my family has the ability to travel to Jena, LA to see me. Many families, families like Jose’s, cannot travel to see him because they cannot afford the trip. Many of my cellmate families cannot come to Louisiana because they cannot pay for it, or are too afraid to make the trip, or cannot come inside the facility because they are undocumented themselves.

As for me, I miss my home. I miss everything I left behind. I miss my life before April 3, I miss being in touch with my people and reading their messages. It is extremely difficult being cut off from everyone back home, uninformed, and alone. I try to stay positive as much as I can, but it’s not easy being isolated, and sometimes I just feel like giving up.

Thanks to all who have shown solidarity because of my story. Thanks to the organizations and to the press, who have given me their support. Thanks to my family. Thanks to all the people who have not abandoned me in this test.

Thank you for all your thoughts and prayers. And finally, thanks to the team of lawyers who are working to free me from this prison.

Blessings, Manuel Duran.

#FreeManuelDuran #ManuelDuran

En Español aqui: https://goo.gl/vxUrZf