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| VINCENT J.
MUSI / AURORA FOR TIME |
PROUD CITIZENS: Fernandez,
above right, and his son migrated by the
rules |
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Millions of Hispanic families who immigrate to the U.S. from
Mexico and other Latin American countries each year arrive the
old-fashioned way—legally. Among many of them, patience is
running thin with the waves of aliens who ignore the law. Fernando
Fernandez Jr., of Gila Bend, Ariz., speaks with great pride about
how his father gained entry under a guest-worker program in the
1950s. "They announced [the program] in Mexico, and he and my
uncle went," the son recalls. "They did a physical on
him at the border. They drew blood and everything. Once he got
accepted, he worked on a farm in the Eloy area. One of his
supervisors sponsored him to stay. They liked the way he worked.
He became a green-card holder."
Fernandez was 3 years old when he arrived in Arizona. "I
went from Head Start through high school [in Gila Bend]," he
says. "I didn't speak any English. Two school aides were
Mexican. I communicated with them." Because of language
difficulties, he repeated the first grade. "I remember
wearing secondhand clothes. I didn't have Nikes. I had canvas
tennis shoes."
But that was then. Now Fernandez, who became a naturalized U.S.
citizen, is married and has two children, one starting high school,
the other in elementary school. His wife Anna is a teacher's aide.
He works two jobs, one in purchasing at the nearby Air Force base
and the other at night for a janitorial service.
Several years ago, when an aunt and her son wanted to come to
the U.S. legally, Fernandez and his wife volunteered to co-sponsor
them. "I had to give up all my information [to the U.S.
government]. They needed all my tax returns. They needed proof of
income. They needed all my banking information. Any kind of monies
that I had put away, they needed all that kind of information,"
he says, as proof of his wherewithal to sponsor the new arrivals.
"I'm financially responsible for them. They cannot go out
and, if they put in a claim, say, for food stamps and stuff like
that, it'll all come back to me. I've got to provide for
them."
Fernandez says it was a long, laborious process. From beginning
to end, "I'm going to say it took them three to four years
... But you have all these thousands of people who just walk
across the border. They know how to beat the system. They take
advantage of all the [government] programs. They get free health
care. I pay an outrageous amount of money for health insurance."
Still, he has no regrets for having played it straight: "There
are a lot of people who do this the legal way. Otherwise, you have
no security." Fernandez says when he and his wife return to
Mexico for visits, "it breaks our hearts when [the children]
clean the car window. They sell pieces of gum. I always thank God
that Dad brought us to this country. You can have whatever you
want as long as you work."
Source: http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101040920/taliensbox.html
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