Posted on 03/09/2007 3:49:13 PM PST by CATravelAgent
About 75 community members and clergy leaders clogged San Rafael's Canal district sidewalks at dawn Friday to offer solidarity for the community - with plans to continue morning protests until the immigration raids which began this week are stopped. Protesters gathered at the Country Club Bowling Alley on Vivian Street at 5 a.m. Friday, many with candles in hand, and dispersed to various intersections throughout the neighborhood for a three-hour morning vigil in support of immigrants in the Canal neighborhood. Marinwood resident Bob Owen, 67, who arrived at 5 a.m. with his wife Jill, said he was moved by the stories he heard from talking with people who live in the Canal area. "A woman who has a child here was crying as she told me about what has been going on," he said. "It's been so terrible for them. They're afraid to go to school, to the store. They're being told not to answer the door. I'm here out of a feeling of solidarity." "We know people have been feeling afraid and we want them to know they're not alone," said Jill Owen, 63. Agents from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the largest investigative branch of the Department of Homeland Security, have swept into the Canal neighborhood in the early morning hours this week and arrested an unspecified number of people, many rousted from their homes, as part of a stepped-up campaign dubbed Operation Return to Sender to send illegal immigrants out of the country. The Rev. Carol Hovis, executive director of the Marin Interfaith Council, which organized the protest, said the early-morning arrival was timed to meet the early-morning raids by officials of the Immigration and Customers Enforcement. "We wanted to be here to say to the children and families it's safe," she said. Marjorie Delgadillo, 23, a counselor at the Marin Childcare Council in San Rafael and Petaluma resident, arrived at 5 a.m. to show her support for community members with whom she lived shortly after arriving from Nicaragua at the age of 5. "I feel that it could have easily been me," said Delgadillo, who earned her residency at the age of 16. "I could have been one of the residents of the Canal who went through this horrible ordeal. It just hit so close to home for me. I'm a kid from the neighborhood." Though raids have also taken place in Novato this week, Hovis said protesters came to the Canal "because this neighborhood is such a close-knit neighborhood. "It means a lot but it also means this has become a target," she said. The protesters who planned to remain through 8:30 a.m. did not see any immigration officials arrive on Friday. Hovis said they will return at 5 a.m. every weekday morning next week. As people congregated below on the sidewalks of the Medway Drive and Canal Street intersection, residents in surrounding apartment buildings peered down from their balconies and the occasional driver tooted a horn in support. The Rev. Julianne Stokstad, pastor of the First Congregational Church in San Rafael, stood on the sidewalk with candle in hand and fully adorned in her religious garments. "I understand our laws but the methods are wrong," she said. "I don't approve of the methods used particularly with the children. I'm here to show my solidarity and support." Julie Long, owner of Bellam Produce Market at the corner of Bellam Boulevard and Belvedere Street, said the raids have created a ghost town out of the neighborhood and dropped her daily sales from $3,000 a day to about $700. "I've been here 10 years and it's the worst I've ever seen it," she said. "It's pretty scary. There's nobody on the streets and I don't have one single person in my store right now." "This is just the beginning," said Sister Marion Irvine, of the Dominican Convent in San Rafael. "We're going to be here until ICE decides this is not the place to be."
link to article:
http://www.marinij.com/marin/ci_5397849 http://www.marinij.com/marin/ci_5397849
Improved version:
About 75 community members and clergy leaders clogged San Rafael's Canal district sidewalks at dawn Friday to offer solidarity for the community - with plans to continue morning protests until the immigration raids which began this week are stopped.
Protesters gathered at the Country Club Bowling Alley on Vivian Street at 5 a.m. Friday, many with candles in hand, and dispersed to various intersections throughout the neighborhood for a three-hour morning vigil in support of immigrants in the Canal neighborhood.
Marinwood resident Bob Owen, 67, who arrived at 5 a.m. with his wife Jill, said he was moved by the stories he heard from talking with people who live in the Canal area.
"A woman who has a child here was crying as she told me about what has been going on," he said. "It's been so terrible for them. They're afraid to go to school, to the store. They're being told not to answer the door. I'm here out of a feeling of solidarity."
"We know people have been feeling afraid and we want them to know they're not alone," said Jill Owen, 63.
Agents from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the largest investigative branch of the Department of Homeland Security, have swept into the Canal neighborhood in the early morning hours this week and arrested an unspecified number of people, many rousted from their homes, as part of a stepped-up campaign dubbed Operation Return to Sender to send illegal immigrants out of the country.
The Rev. Carol Hovis, executive director of the Marin Interfaith Council, which organized the protest, said the early-morning arrival was timed to meet the early-morning raids by officials of the Immigration and Customers Enforcement.
"We wanted to be here to say to the children and families it's safe," she said.
Marjorie Delgadillo, 23, a counselor at the Marin Childcare Council in San Rafael and Petaluma resident, arrived at 5 a.m. to show her support for community members with whom she lived shortly after arriving from Nicaragua at the age of 5.
"I feel that it could have easily been me," said Delgadillo, who earned her residency at the age of 16. "I could have been one of the residents of the Canal who went through this horrible ordeal. It just hit so close to home for me. I'm a kid from the neighborhood."
Though raids have also taken place in Novato this week, Hovis said protesters came to the Canal "because this neighborhood is such a close-knit neighborhood.
"It means a lot but it also means this has become a target," she said.
The protesters who planned to remain through 8:30 a.m. did not see any immigration officials arrive on Friday.
Hovis said they will return at 5 a.m. every weekday morning next week.
As people congregated below on the sidewalks of the Medway Drive and Canal Street intersection, residents in surrounding apartment buildings peered down from their balconies and the occasional driver tooted a horn in support.
The Rev. Julianne Stokstad, pastor of the First Congregational Church in San Rafael, stood on the sidewalk with candle in hand and fully adorned in her religious garments.
"I understand our laws but the methods are wrong," she said. "I don't approve of the methods used particularly with the children. I'm here to show my solidarity and support."
Julie Long, owner of Bellam Produce Market at the corner of Bellam Boulevard and Belvedere Street, said the raids have created a ghost town out of the neighborhood and dropped her daily sales from $3,000 a day to about $700.
"I've been here 10 years and it's the worst I've ever seen it," she said. "It's pretty scary. There's nobody on the streets and I don't have one single person in my store right now."
"This is just the beginning," said Sister Marion Irvine, of the Dominican Convent in San Rafael. "We're going to be here until ICE decides this is not the place to be."
"Marinwood resident Bob Owen, 67, who arrived at 5 a.m. with his wife Jill, said he was moved by the stories he heard from talking with people who live in the Canal area."
I wonder if one was the family low paid housekeeper? I always get a kick out of low number, early hour protests with virtually no impact on anything but thier ego's. They are not even impeding the morning traffic. Hope they keep it up, i always need a good laugh.
.....the land of hot tubs and peacock feathers....I know it well.....
It would be great to organize a counter-protest if possible. Hey, I'm up at 5:30 anyway, can I get another 74 people to join me? Anyone good at producing signs? That would give this lib-newspaper something to write about!
...Sorry my friend....I live over in Walnut Creek....but my folks lived off San Marin Dr. in Novato for many years.
Ok, so maybe I'll just go rent a white van and drive around for awhile :-)
If 75 people can "clog" a district's sidewalks, they must be really really fat.
It'll be interesting to drive Bellam Blvd. tomorrow and see it minus clots of illegals.
""It's been so terrible for them. They're afraid to go to school, to the store. They're being told not to answer the door."
Good. I want lawbreakers to fear getting caught.
Hey this is rich! Here's one of the lib's letter to the editor:
The immigration sweeps that are targeting Marin are an abuse that cannot be ignored.
Under the snide sound bite "Operation Return to Sender," the immigration police are barging into homes and apartments and dragging mothers, fathers and children away. Most of these families consist of hardworking and law-abiding people. Even U.S. citizens have been swept up.
Those who support this "tough enforcement" turn a blind eye when their homes are built, cleaned and landscaped, when their children are cared for and when their food is served by these "targets."
The United States of America was built by immigrants seeking a better life. I do not pay my taxes to fund vans full of police striking fear into the hearts of families and schoolchildren. What about you?
Remember, when all these "undesirables" are rounded up, someone else will be next. It's a slippery slope.
Boo Hoo Hoo... He might have to clean his own house! I guess he's glad to pay taxes to keep illegals on welfare, in public schools and overcrowded prisions.
So did she get knocked up and have a kid are what, are maybe she was one of the illegals that algore and clintoon got through without background checks?
Illegal alien enablers. Again and again the press deliberately tries to blur the line between legal and illegal immigration. No sympathy here!
http://maroonedinmarin.blogspot.com/2007/03/marin-peace-group-issues-veiled-threat.html
http://maroonedinmarin.blogspot.com/2007/03/shame-on-ij-clergy-local-leaders-for.html
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