Monday, June 16, 2014

Welcoming America

A few weeks ago the director of the organization I work for asked me to submit my application for the advisory council to the new Welcoming Pittsburgh Initiative that the governor of Pittsburgh is putting together. It's an exciting initiative that is part of the larger Welcoming America Initiative (http://www.welcomingamerica.org/). I must say that I was surprised that I was asked for to do this. I was surprised because I haven't been working with immigrants, refugees, and asylees very long, and although I'm passionate about helping them during their transition into our society, I didn't feel experienced enough to submit an application for this exciting new advisory council. It's not that I'm not up to the work because I am, but I had to wonder where my application would fall in the stack of other applications.

It wasn't until I actually started working on my application (my bio and answers to the application questions) that I realized I have a lot of experience to offer, not just professional, but personal. I am the daughter of a Mexican immigrant who struggled to get where she is in society. I am the granddaughter of a Mexican immigrant who married an American officer just to give her children a better life and worked hard to get everything she obtained...God rest her soul. I am the wife of a Turkish immigrant who is limited to working at universities because of the caps on H1B visas for the for-profit businesses and the fact that he doesn't have his green card yet to start his own business. I have had my own experiences as well being of mixed-race, and although they are no where near the struggles my older relatives had to experience, they are real and they are my own.

As I researched items for the application, I felt more confident about my chances for getting onto the advisory council. Now, grant you, applications are still being submitted and haven't been reviewed yet, but I am confident that mine will stand out among a lot of them. Having come from Texas, where there is a large immigrant population, I feel that I have a lot to offer the advisory council in Pittsburgh..and not only the advisory council, but the community. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that I see all and know all. I know I don't.

After attending last Thursday's Global Great Lakes Pittsburgh Convening, I know I can offer productive ideas to the advisory council and help educate the community to promote mutual respect and cooperation between foreign-born and U.S.-born Americans. What I heard at the conference is everything I already knew (and it inspired me to start writing this blog). Pittsburgh as a whole has a long way to go when it comes to certain things on immigration and I want to be at the forefront to help them along. Wish me luck!

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