| By
Patricia Zapor
Catholic News Service
WASHINGTON
(CNS) -- As many as 500,000 people left work early or took advantage of
spring break from school and thronged to the National Mall April 10 to
voice their support for immigrants, chanting the words “Si, se puede”
and “We are Americans, too.”
Bracketed on one end by the Capitol and on the other by the Washington
Monument, people with accents from Bolivia, El Salvador, Mexico and Peru
waved American flags and signs reading “We are America,” as
speakers on a stage blocks away called on elected officials to fix problems
with the legal immigration system and provide a way for the 11 million
to 12 million illegal immigrants already in this country to legalize their
status.
The chant that first became popular during the 1960s’ farmworker
protests led by Cesar Chavez, “Si, se puede,” which translates
as “Yes, you can” or “Yes, it’s possible,”
echoed again and again as immigrants formed the base of one of the largest
rallies in Washington in recent years.
“I look across this historic gathering and I see the future of America,”
said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., co-sponsor with Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., of an immigration bill promoted on signs carried by many in the
crowd. “Today we stand together as brothers and sisters to shape
America’s destiny -- old Americans, new Americans, future Americans
-- all joined together for the common good.”
Kennedy said the debate over immigration legislation “goes to the
heart of who we are as Americans. It will determine who can earn the privilege
of citizenship. It will determine our strength in separating those who
would harm from those who contribute to our values. It will determine
the course of our national progress and economic growth.”
Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick of Washington recalled that about 50 years
ago an earlier archbishop, Cardinal Patrick O’Boyle, addressed a
crowd on the Mall calling for justice and equality for African-Americans.
“That struggle is not over and we must still fight against racial
discrimination in our land,” Cardinal McCarrick said.
A half-century later, “we gather in prayerful protest against another
discrimination, that of the immigrant who comes to our country seeking
a better life for himself and his family,” he continued.
“In unity with the memory of Cardinal O’Boyle, the Catholic
Church in Washington raises its voice once again in a call for comprehensive
immigration reform legislation.”
Cardinal McCarrick prayed “for those who remain in the shadows of
our society, for those who are unable to defend their rights or give their
full talents to their communities without fear.” He also prayed
for those “who feel compelled to risk their lives in crossing the
vast desert” and that elected officials may have “the wisdom
that they may understand the need for change and the courage that they
might accomplish it.”
Washington government agencies no longer provide official crowd estimates
for events, but organizers said there were as many as 500,000 participants.
The city’s transit system reported that the number of people using
the subway system was the second largest in history, with more than 820,000
people riding the trains, 137,000 more than on an average Monday at this
time of year.
Midway through the scheduled two-hour length of the rally, hundreds of
people continued to pour onto the Mall from the nearest Metro station.
At about that point, several thousand more people joined the rally, after
marching from a park two miles north of the White House.
Others came by carpool and busload, some via transportation arranged by
churches, unions and immigrants’ rights organizations.
By 6 p.m., the crowd stretched from the stage at Seventh Street beyond
the Smithsonian Metro station at 12th Street, and more people were still
arriving.
A group of Salvadoran-American teens from Woodbridge, Va., said they came
primarily to support fellow Latinos.
“We are the ones who make people’s houses, who do the jobs
other people don’t do,” said Veronica Artiga, a student at
Freedom High School in Woodbridge. Artiga, her sister,
Graciela, and their friends, Jonathan, Sonia and Jocelyn Benitez, said
they had been involved in protests organized at their schools, but that
they came to the rally with their parents.
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