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A message from League of United Latin American Citizens
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Contact: David Cruz | (818) 689-9991 | davidcruz@lulac.org
LULAC Honors America’s Veterans
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Nation’s Oldest and Largest Latino Civil Rights Organization Pays Tribute to
Freedom’s Protectors
Washington, DC – The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) today joins
the nation in honoring all the men and women who have served in our armed forces
to protect the freedoms of our Republic and the principles of our democracy which
generations of Americans have enjoyed since our founding.
“There are more than 18.2 million men and women alive today in our country who
have stepped out of the ordinary lives we all have, joined our military and done
extraordinary things on behalf of all us,” says Domingo Garcia, National
President. “Also, we stop in solemn remembrance of the more than 1.3 million
Americans who have lost their lives in all military conflicts our nation has
experienced since we were established because they too are an important part of
our history,” he added.
“America is grateful to the more than nine million veterans who receive care and
services every year through the Department of Veterans Affairs,” says Sindy
Benavides, National Chief Executive Officer. “We know that nothing can fully
repay the sacrifices they and their families have made in protection of our
freedoms that keep the United States of America the brightest example of
democracy on earth,” she stated.
Each veteran has his or her own unique experience to commemorate every year at
this time. Former Special Forces combat soldier Miguel Perez-Montes is living
this Veterans Day for the first time in his life as a U.S. Citizen. Yet, instead
of being at home with family and loved ones in Chicago, Illinois, he is spending
it on the road at the border in Tijuana, Mexico.
Miguel says he is there to “bunker with deported veterans”, others who like him,
have experienced great hardship following service as soldiers for their country.
It is a life he knows all too well after the many months he spent when he could
only look north across the border at the land he knew as home.
Miguel served seven-and-a-half years in prison for a non-violent drug crime after
returning from two tours in Afghanistan. It is a mistake he admits and attributes
in part to the scars of PTSD and lack of access to medical resources he needed.
Yet, on the very day he was being released in 2016 after serving his sentence,
the Army veteran was met by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) who would
hold him another one-and-a-half years.
Then in spring of 2018, he was thrust back into Mexico without being allowed to
say goodbye to his family and returned to the country he left at the age of eight
in 1989 when he was brought to the U.S. legally as a permanent resident. Tijuana
became his place of existence as he fought to regain the privilege of returning
to the country he had defended as a soldier.
At that point, Miguel joined the ranks of deported veterans in constant danger, a
group who some criminal groups in Mexico often see as easy prey and targets for
recruitment into their illicit activity. That is what happened to veterans like
Jose Lopez who was killed in Chihuahua. Advocates for deported veterans say
ex-soldiers are pressed into crime with the choice, “plata or plomo” (silver or
lead).
For Miguel Perez, time was not in his favor after years of incarceration and
then, the sudden forced removal from the U.S. However, a groundswell of community
support and advocacy by many organizations including LULAC placed a spotlight on
Miguel’s plight and that of countless other Latino veterans who have been
deported. In September, 2019 an act of clemency by Illinois Governor J.B.
Pritzker allowed him to return for a citizenship hearing. On Friday, October 4,
2019, Miguel took the oath of citizenship and officially became a U.S. citizen.
Today, he shares a few words about his experience:
“Estoy muy feliz!” (I am very happy.) My battle is over and it should never have
happened. This is not an excuse but at the time, I was suffering from anxiety
after coming back from the war. There were not enough resources for help and I
fell into drinking and drugs.
Still, they (U.S. government) can say they did it all right but morally it is not
right to deport veterans. When you swear to protect this country and you commit
mistakes and serve the penalty in full, it is not right to run you off from the
country for 20 to 30 years.
It should be automatic for a soldier to become a U.S. citizen and have
protections from being deported from here forward. The law must be changed.
This experience changed my life. I learned a lot from all the pain and the
injustice but I am not alone. This is an epidemic that is happening to U.S.
veterans from all around the world and it’s wrong. They took me away from my
whole family and just threw me away. Everything in my life was upset.
To all the veterans, don’t fear. Keep going. We were soldiers and will always be
soldiers. All this will end. There will be a positive outcome. Stay strong.
# # #
The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is the nation’s largest and
oldest civil rights volunteer-based organization that empowers Hispanic Americans
and builds strong Latino communities. Headquartered in Washington, DC, with 1,000
councils around the United States and Puerto Rico, LULAC’s programs, services and
advocacy address the most important issues for Latinos, meeting critical needs of
today and the future. For more information, visit www.LULAC.org.
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