Immigration and Slavery [James
Fulford] -
10/20/04
A Filipino-American couple are in
court after officials found out that they had been
harboring an illegal immigrant in their home—for twenty
years—and not paying her any money. (Money was sent to
her family.)
Jefferson Calimlim is an
ENT doctor. He could presumably afford to pay decent
wages.
MILWAUKEE
-
A federal grand
jury has indicted a suburban couple on accusations they
harbored an illegal immigrant for the purpose of private
financial gain.
Jefferson N.
and Elnora M. Calimlim of Brookfield were charged
Tuesday after a maid told investigators that she had not
been able to leave their home without an escort during
the last 20 years except to go to a shopping mall.
"To hold a
domestic servant in virtual servitude for 20 years is a
shocking callous disregard for our nation's most deeply
held values," said Brian Falvey, resident agent in
charge for U.S. immigration and customs enforcement in
Milwaukee.
Federal
investigators are probing whether the physicians sent
money to the maid's family in the Philippines as
promised over the years, after the housekeeper said she
has never seen the money, according to a search warrant
affidavit filed in U.S. District Court.
The couple
agreed to pay the woman $100 per month from 1985 to 1995
and $400 a month thereafter, the affidavit said.
[Associated Press, October 20 2004,
Couple accused of harboring illegal immigrant for
financial gain]
By through the miracle of the
internet, it’s possible to read what they’re saying
about this case in the Filipino press:
CALIMLIM
SIDE: A lawyer representing Jefferson Calimlim said that
Martinez was not held against her will and that her
wages were sent to her family in the Philippines.
"It would
be a significant stretch to say that this lady could not
have walked away any time she wanted to and that there
weren’t innumerable times that she was totally on her
own and couldn’t have walked way or said something," the
lawyer said.
He added
that the maid shopped alone, walked to church alone and
been left alone at home when the Calimlims were on
vacation.
The lawyer
said the complainant was 15 in 1985 when she moved to
the US and was hired as a domestic for Elenora
Calimlim’s father, also a physician.
Investigators said that after Elenora’s father died,
Martinez began working for the Calimlims. [Federico
D. Pascual, Jr.
The Philippine Star
10/21/2004]
Note that even “their side” doesn’t say they weren’t
violating immigration and labor laws, including child
labor laws. Just that they weren’t
committing human slavery.
The Philippines Star’s Federico Pascual, who
lived in America when Marcos was president of the
Philippines, also has this to say about harboring:
HARBORING
TNTs: [VDARE.COM NOTE:
“tago nang tago," illegals, "Tago" means "hide" in
Filipino]
Some
columns back, I
recalled how some US immigration officials were
asking me when I was living in San Francisco about the
unusual (to them) psychology of Filipinos willing to
harbor overstaying friends or relatives despite their
being in violation.
I tried
explaining that if I were a US citizen and a friend or
relative in trouble showed up, I was expected by the
folks back home to help him any way I could. I added
that if I did not look after him, I would never hear the
end of it back in the hometown.
From home,
I would hear something like I had been “Americanized"
finally or that "napunta lang sa Amerika akala mo sino
na siya!" (I’m sorry I can’t/won’t translate this.)
I got a
wave of readers’ email on that. Half said we should not
harbor law violators or illegal aliens, while the other
half sustained the line that, wherever we Pinoys find
ourselves, we should help one another when in trouble.
I went back and read Pascual’s earlier column. He had
said that
Our American friends would say that
harboring illegally staying aliens made us accessories.
They expressed amazement that we did not seem to mind
the legal implications.
I would spend hours explaining (or
was I misrepresenting?) Filipino values, but American
officials could not cross the cultural divide and come
to terms with what to them was plain and simple
harboring of criminals.
Of course, American immigration
officials are not supposed to cross the “cultural
divide” between themselves and illegal aliens. They
are supposed to find the aliens and send them back
across the “cultural divide.”
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