The Wisdom of the US Immigration Dept...

Discussion in 'World Events' started by See Post, Mar 10, 2007.

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  1. See Post

    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By friendofdd

    Here is our government doing it's usual magnificant job of controlling our borders.



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    With parents deported to India, Utah teen finds comfort in spelling
    Green River boy focuses on national competition

    By Christopher Smart
    The Salt Lake Tribune
    Article Last Updated: 03/09/2007 09:35:51 AM MST


    GREEN RIVER - How do you spell "perseverance?"
    When 13-year-old Kunal Sah stands before television cameras May 30-31 to represent Utah - for the second time - at the National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C., his parents won't be there with him.
    Ken and Sarita Sah were deported back to India last July after 16 years residing legally in this country. They ultimately lost their battle to remain under tough U.S. immigration regulations in the post-9/11 atmosphere.
    Kunal was born in the United States and, as such, is a citizen. He moved with his folks to this central Utah town 10 years ago when they bought the Budget Inn motel here. With hard work, Ken and Sarita in 2001 Kunal Sah, 13, watches TV from the dinner table in the apartment he shares with his uncle in the Ramada Limited hotel in Green River. See a photo gallery. (Ramin Rahimian/Special to the Tribune)then built the 46-room Ramada Inn nearby.
    In Kunal's bedroom at the Ramada, decorated with trophies from other spelling bees and a huge Webster's dictionary, he finds New Delhi on a globe. It's almost exactly halfway around the world, he explains.
    "If I knew when they would be able to come back, I would be relieved. But . . .."
    The fact is, nobody knows when his parents will be allowed back in the United States - even for a visit.
    According to the Sahs' Salt Lake City immigration attorney, Steven Laurence, it's all quite uncertain.
    Although Sen. Orrin Hatch's office helped the Sahs navigate the complexities of immigration regulations, the senator stopped short of sponsoring legislation that would circumvent those legalities.
    "They have a compelling case," says Heather Barney, the senator's spokeswoman. "But special legislation is for rare and unusual cases."
    That's something the folks in Emery County find hard to believe, according to Patsy Stoddard, the editor of the Emery County Progress newspaper. She describes Ken and Sarita as model citizens.
    Kunal jotted down these words and put them up above his desk. See a photo gallery. (Ramin Rahimian/Special to the Tribune)"Our governor went to India to bring back a baby," she says. "And yet here is a family torn apart, and nobody is doing anything about it."
    The separation is a daily challenge for everyone in Kunal's family, not least his uncle, D.C. Prasad, a legal U.S. resident.
    Before Ken and Sarita were deported, Prasad ran the Budget Inn for his brother. Now, he must operate both motels and watch over his 13-year-old nephew.
    "It's a bad situation, but what can you do?" he laments. "We just have to make Kunal understand that we don't have any options right now."
    As a 12-year-old, Kunal traveled to India with his parents when they were forced out last Kunal Sah plays an online computer game Wednesday with classmates Armando Zamudio, left, and Bianca Trejo at Green River High School. See a photo gallery. (Ramin Rahimian/Special to the Tribune)summer. But once there, he became ill and had to be hospitalized. Upon his return to the United States to begin eighth grade, the straight-A student struggled to get Cs.
    "It was really hard on him when he went to India and then returned," said Kaye Nelson, who teaches English at the small Green River High School, where grades seven through 12 are combined under one roof.
    "He saw a home that wasn't his. It was, 'I am here and they are there.' He was missing his parents."
    Gradually, Kunal steeled himself and now is hitting straight-As again. He jokes and smiles easily as he wends through school corridors with his classmates, who sometimes call him the "walking dictionary."
    In sixth-period computer class, he gives helpful hints to his classmates after he burned through the workshop assignment, typing 65 words per minute. Later, in seventh-period P.E., he shoots hoops with the other eighth-grade boys and appears like any other kid.
    But when the final bell rings, Kunal's world shifts. Back at the Ramada, he helps his uncle take reservations over the phone, while pop-Indian music plays in the background.
    Kunal is fluent in Hindi and loves Indian comedies. His favorite American movie is "Akeelah and the Bee," a drama about a young girl and a spelling bee.
    While his classmates enjoy the spring-like weather, Kunal is learning the hotel business and studying.
    "Mainly, I just want to finish school in this country. I want to go to Harvard," he offers. "My classmates have more freedom than I do. But I spend my time educationally and want to gain more knowledge."
    But Kunal's upper lip isn't as stiff as he puts on, his uncle notes. The teenager despairs from time to time and calls his parents often.
    New Delhi is 12 time zones ahead of Green River. And Kunal isn't the only one with a heavy load.
    In a telephone interview, Ken Sah is matter-of-fact.
    "It's very tough. He calls every day, and he cries," he says of his son.
    "He needs to live with his parents. But he doesn't have that. We try to make him feel better and stronger."
    Ken and Sarita live in a kind of limbo, moving from the home of one relative to another, unable to start new lives with their son and businesses in America, and hoping against hope that some kind of miracle will lift them from desolation.
    "You have millions of [undocumented] people who have broken the law, and no one is forcing them out [of the U.S.]," Ken says. "But I followed the law - and this is my reward for being honest."
    For Kunal, it's practically impossible to understand why things are the way they are.
    "When I am missing them, I mostly just go to spelling study," he says.
    How do you spell "heartache?"







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  2. See Post

    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By friendofdd

    Sorry about the link, but I've included the entire article as written in the Salt Lake Tribune.
     
  3. See Post

    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By DouglasDubh

    Deporting two people from Green River probably cut the population there by a significant percentage. I drove through there recently, and there's not much there there.
     
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    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By SuperDry

    I read the whole thing, but it doesn't seem to say what actually the immigration problem is. It would seem to me that that's the crux of the whole situation, but it's not mentioned at all.
     
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    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By Mr X

    Yes, I wonder that too.

    What "new law" would cause people who were fine for 16 years to suddenly be undesirable?

    Besides that, can't their son sponser them for immigration, considering he's an American citizen (I believe there's no need to even wait for a lottery spot in that case)??
     
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    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By cmpaley

    >>Besides that, can't their son sponser them for immigration, considering he's an American citizen (I believe there's no need to even wait for a lottery spot in that case)??<<

    No. He's not 18 yet. There's probably a 200 year waiting list just to apply (and then a 300 year wait to talk to someone, after about 500 years of other red-tape). Yet another sign of our incredibly disfunctional and insanely broken immigration system.

    I think it's easier to get into heaven, including time waiting in purgatory!
     
  7. See Post

    See Post New Member

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    Originally Posted By fkurucz

    >>I think it's easier to get into heaven, including time waiting in purgatory!<<

    I think that's because these days more people want to get into the US than into heaven.
     

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