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Biden gives hope to immigrants, recounts journey to U.S.

By Oluwaseun Akingboye, Bureau Chief, U.S.
02 June 2023   |   4:06 am
The United States of America President, Joseph Biden, has reiterated the need for the citizenry to learn more about the history of the country's diverse and varied immigrant communities, seeking better lives for immigrants in the nation.

US President Joe Biden speaks during a press conference following the G7 Leaders’ Summit in Hiroshima on May 21, 2023. (Photo by Kiyoshi Ota / POOL / AFP)

The United States of America President, Joseph Biden, has reiterated the need for the citizenry to learn more about the history of the country’s diverse and varied immigrant communities, seeking better lives for immigrants in the nation.

Biden said this in a Proclamation made in the White House on May 31, 2023 to declare June as “National Immigrant Heritage Month, 2023,” reminding the citizenry that immigration into the country is the dream of her founders.

“America is more than a place; it is an idea. It is the idea that everyone is created equal and deserves to be treated equally throughout their lives and that everyone should have a fair shot and an equal chance to get ahead.

“That is what has drawn people to our shores for centuries. It is what makes us who we are. And that very idea of America has been advanced by immigrants from every part of the world – my ancestors and yours,” he said.

He stressed that “Their dreams built America, and during National Immigrant Heritage Month, we celebrate their courage.” Biden recounted how many powerful U.S. citizens, presently and past, were products of immigration into the country, revealing that “The First Lady and I are proud descendants of immigrants – the Giacoppas, from the northeast corner of Sicily in Italy, and the Finnegans of County Louth and the Blewitts of County Mayo in Ireland.

“Vice President Harris was born in Oakland, California, to parents who emigrated from India and Jamaica. Like so many who still come here seeking a better future, our parents and great-grandparents could not be sure what life would bring. But they had faith that, for their children and grandchildren, anything would be possible in America. And they were right.”

According to him, “Many families also came to America in search of a better future and the promise of the American Dream, and each wave of newcomers brings energy and new ideas to move our Nation forward.’’

Speaking on the importance of immigration to the economic and political growth of the country, he said: “Today, one third of our doctors and nearly three quarters of our farmworkers are immigrants, and so many more are essential workers, first responders, and military service members.

“Immigrants own approximately one in five businesses, create millions of jobs, pay hundreds of billions in taxes, and spend even more on American goods. Almost half of all Fortune 500 companies were started by immigrants or their kids.

“Immigrants help strengthen our diplomatic and people-to-people ties around the world. It’s simple: immigrants keep our Nation strong and our economy growing. That truth used to be something most of us agreed on.”

He added that “President Ronald Reagan proudly signed a law giving an opportunity to 2.7 million undocumented people to seek permanent residence. President George W. Bush pushed hard for comprehensive immigration reform.

“On day one of my Presidency, I sent the Congress my plan that includes a pathway to citizenship for Dreamers, people with temporary status, farmworkers, and essential workers; smarter border solutions, including more equipment and modern infrastructure; and provisions to clear court backlogs, speed up processing, and protect families.”

He appealed to the American citizens to come together again in a bipartisan way to fix their broken immigration system for good, stressing that his administration would keep using every tool to make the system more elderly and humane until the Congress acts.

“We have announced new pathways for nationals of Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Haiti, and other countries in the region to come here lawfully.

“And in May, we joined with partners across the Western Hemisphere to launch a plan to open new centres where people can receive help with applying to come to the United States, rather than making the dangerous trek at the mercy of criminal organizations and smugglers.

“At home, we have expanded whistleblower protections for undocumented workers so they too can call out wage theft or unsafe working conditions, improving things for everyone,” he said.

The American President listed various gains with the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programme, which has allowed 800,000 dreamers to live and work freely in the only country they know as home for more than 10 years.

He mentioned that his administration had recently proposed a plan to expand DACA recipients’ access to health care through the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid.

“Immigration has always been essential to America, and this month, we reflect on the strength and spirit of immigrants that have been passed down through families and infused in our nation,” he said.

Recounting his immigration history into America, he said: “This spring, I had the chance to travel back to Ireland, to walk the ground my ancestors walked, and to celebrate the bonds that connect us still. Over the years, stories of that place have become part of my soul.

“I stood beside a cathedral built of bricks that my great-great-great-grandfather supplied. I imagined his son bringing his family across the ocean during the famine of 1850, leaving all they had known for hope on a distant shore.

“I remembered stories of his son – my great-grandfather – who kept those roots alive in Scranton, helping to found the Irish American Association, chairing the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and passing that pride on to his granddaughter – my mom.

“It is a pride that speaks to the history and the values that bind us: immigrant values of hard work, dignity, and respect that I have tried to pass on to my own children and grandchildren.”

He, without mincing words, averred that “Most Americans have their own version of that same story: ancestors who overcame incredible odds to build new lives in this promised land and contribute to the fabric of our nation.

In a statement by his Special Assistant on Media, Kehinde Akinyemi, Obasanjo told those at the event that Nigerians in the diaspora are making the country proud in their different areas of endeavour, urging them to be good citizens wherever they are domiciled.

“Nigerian nationals are often very united when they are abroad, but something else when they return to the country,” Obasanjo had said.The former president appealed to them to be good citizens, not only outside the country, but also when they return home to Nigeria. The Balogun Owu thanked the Rutgers University management for the warm reception accorded the delegation and for the “far-reaching engagements.”

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