New West Book Review
Growing Up Illegal in Denver: Helen Thorpe’s “Just Like Us”
The first lady of Denver's riveting personal inquiry into illegal immigration.By Jenny Shank, 9-14-09
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Just Like Us: The True Story of Four Mexican Girls Coming of Age in America
by Helen Thorpe
Scribner, 387 pages, $27.99
Some readers will pick up Helen Thorpe‘s Just Like Us because it’s written by the wife of Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper. But by the time they finish this moving, intelligent, and nuanced inquiry into the situation of illegal immigrants in contemporary America, they may begin to think of Hickenlooper as the husband of the writer Helen Thorpe. Thorpe begins by plunging into the preparations for prom night of four engaging west Denver girls in April of 2004.
Marisela is flamboyant, driven, “dramatic,” and wears “twice as much makeup as anybody else in her circle.” Yadira is strong and reserved and “never gave away anything important with her facial expressions.” Sensitive Clara usually dresses like a tomboy, and Elissa is a star athlete. They are all eighteen, all top students at their Denver public high school, and each of their families immigrated from Mexico.
While Clara has a green card and Elissa was born in the U.S., Marisela and Yadira remain illegal immigrants, born in Mexico but raised in the United States, with American ambitions and the skills to realize them, but with the host of insurmountable obstacles that living in this country without citizenship cause. Simple privileges that their peers enjoy, such as getting a driver’s license, boarding an airplane, or qualifying for in-state tuition, are out of their reach. When legislation that would allow illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition in Colorado fails to pass, the girls manage to cobble together scholarships or funds from benefactors to go to college, and three of them decide to attend the University of Denver, while the fourth, Elissa, heads to Regis College in Denver.
The girls had become friends in middle school, and Thorpe met them with the intent to follow how their lives unfolded through the completion of college. Thorpe shares her personal stakes in the issue of immigration: her parents were Irish, she grew up in the U.S. with a green card, and became a citizen when she was twenty-one. During the years the book takes place, Denver becomes one of the centers of the immigration debate, with congressman Tom Tancredo bringing attention to his stance that all illegal immigrants must be deported, and chiding Mayor Hickenlooper for running Denver as a “sanctuary city” for illegals.
But Thorpe doesn’t portray Tancredo as a villain. After she attends many of his speeches and accompanies him to the north Denver streets where he grew up among Italian immigrants, she begins to better understand his views. Although her concern for the girls she’s following is paramount, Thorpe learns that there are no simple solutions to the problem of illegal immigration.
In May of 2005, an illegal immigrant named Raul Goméz García shot and killed Denver police officer Donnie Young, who was working off-duty as a security guard at Salon Ocampo, a popular gathering place for Mexican families in Denver. The subsequent investigation determines that Goméz García had been employed as a dishwasher at the Cherry Cricket, a restaurant partially owned by Mayor Hickenlooper. When he became mayor, Hickenlooper placed his restaurants in a blind trust so that he wouldn’t be involved in their day-to-day operations, and had nothing to do with the hiring of Goméz García, but essentially, as Thorpe writes, “The mayor had employed an illegal alien who had killed a cop.”
Thorpe’s sympathy for Donnie Young’s family and her anguish over her own family’s role in this murder is palpable as she follows the developments in the case, meets with Young’s widow, Kelly, and attends the trial of Goméz García. This narrative serves as a striking counterpoint to the story of the girls—they are the examples of the best possible illegal immigrants, striving to obtain an education, and Goméz García is the worst possible example. Thorpe writes:
“If Marisela or Yadira had gotten equal time on the news with Raúl Goméz García, perhaps the rest of Denver would have been left with a more balanced view of the most recent arrivals, but the girls led quiet, unnoticed lives. And so the narrative of Goméz García perpetually threatened to hijack the collective understanding of who these newcomers were, even though nobody who was associated with Salon Ocampo would have considered him a fair representative of the people who congregated there. We were one city after all, I thought; the problem was that we just couldn’t see it.”
Just Like Us is as entertaining as it is important, packed with memorable scenes that Thorpe records with clarity, in three-dimensions. Thorpe places into the foreground the people who usually disappear into the background, such as the kitchen workers and janitors at restaurants and society events. She follows the girls to dance clubs, family parties, and sorority meetings, and attends many of the girls’ classes at DU in which immigration or issues of class are discussed. Marisela and Yadira do not share with their classmates or professors the fact of their lack of citizenship, and the reader feels how cutting the remarks of students from more privileged backgrounds are to the girls. In one of the most moving episodes of the book, Thorpe travels where Yadira cannot, to visit Yadira’s mother in rural Mexico after she has been deported for using another woman’s social security number to work. Yadira misses her mother desperately, but can’t visit because she can’t cross the border.
Just Like Us is an accomplished book that should be added to the short list of essential works of journalism investigating the lives of underclass people in America, such as Adrian Nicole LeBlanc’s Random Family, Alex Kotlowitz’s There Are No Children Here and the Pulitzer-Prize winning reporting of Katherine Boo. Thorpe plumbs, as she puts it, “the intersection between the terrible mystery of our being and the inevitably flawed fashion in which we govern ourselves.” This sharp and intensely personal narrative provides a riveting portrait of the city of Denver from the perspectives of all its inhabitants, legal and illegal, revealing the intimate lives of some human beings at the center of the fraught political issue of illegal immigration.
Helen Thorpe will discuss her book at the Tattered Cover (LoDo) on September 22 at 7:30 p.m.
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Comments
Illegal aliens have made America the dumping ground for all their illegal alien children, then we have to school them and give them free medical care.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSe3C5vMafM&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_ZnX9JRo5M&NR=1
I for one, am sick and tired of these ILLEGAL ALIENS snubbing their nose at our immigration laws and the many other laws of this Country. If our Federal Government can not ENFORCE our immigration laws, and get these ILLEGAL ALIENS out of this Country, then let the States do it! One way or another, an end has to come to this illegal immigration, and not with AMNESTY! Amnesty will only encourage more ILLEGAL ALIENS to invade our Country and reward those who broke our laws and raped the American taxpayer in many ways...depressing our wages, taking our jobs, overwhelming our schools with their ILLEGAL ALIEN children, driving without a license or car insurance, all the crime from stolen identities to rape, drugs and everything else.
It's time for ZERO TOLERENCE with these ILLEGAL ALIENS. It's time for them get out of this Country and back in their own Country where they belong. When we get rid of the ILLEGAL ALIENS, we will get rid of all the problems that go with them. THAT IS A FACT!
NO ILLEGAL ALIEN HAS A RIGHT TO BE IN THIS COUNTRY FOR ANY REASON!
The Mexicans are here to work, and following them, as camp followers always have, is a group intent on parasitizing their fellow countrymen for profit and gain through extortion and robbery. The drug cartels now have them captive here as illegal aliens, and their families captive in Mexico as hostages in a lawless land of murder and mayhem. The illegals work here at great risk, and the camp followers are present with arrogance and distain for US custom, culture and law. The US deportation threat has become part and parcel of the drug cartel strategy to have a compliant work force here. It makes you wonder how corrupt our politicians and public servants are becoming, and how deep the bribery has become along the borders.
The thing that particularly galls me is that aliens are courted as prospective voters by the Democrats, and therefore the problem is never addressed by legislators. It only grows.
I am the only non-Mexican on the farm I work for, owned by a naturalized Mexican US citizen. He needs pickers in late summer, and for all the complaining about who takes whose job, I have never seen an Anglo family or individual come to work, nor African Americans or Native Americans. We have a contingent of Hmong people and Mexicans, all of whom fill out employment papers, present required IDs, and do the work. Our problem this year was there were so many who wanted to work, and it appeared that we let too many out of concern for their welfare and need. Our picking rotations were short and intense leaving our paid overhead without work for days at a time, doing make-work jobs. Not a great way to run a railroad. Where would the owner be without illegals working I don't know. But he is but one of hundreds of thousands of employers who use that work force while millions of American citizens stay home and earn unemployment or welfare paid for by the very taxes withheld from those who do show up to pick.
When you have cultural and racial minorities with diametrically opposed solutions to their own welfare, with some groups working several jobs to make ends meet and others not working generationally while getting by on public assistance, you do wonder how a solution will ever be gained. That equality for all has been lost in the struggle is apparent. How we solve the problem is not. Many books will be written before a solution becomes reality.
Now the party has room for few but snaggle tooth yokels whose major worry is queers, furriners, and other people's sex lives...
TR was a Republican when he was elected vice President. He became President when McKinley was shot by a lefty anarchist in 1901. He served almost two terms, and elected NOT to run in 1908. Taft, a conservative Republican ran and won the election. TR was not happy with Taft, his lifestyle and Presidency, ran as a Progressive in 1912. TR was shot while making a speech in Milwaukee. He finished his speech, bleeding vigorously, and survived. He was the Ross Perot of his age, and his third party Progressives almost won the Presidency, but Woodrow Wilson beat him in a squeaker. Almost all the planks of the Progressive platform became law.
If you had paid attention in school, or attended even, you might have learned about TR's politics. As it stands, you don't know sour owl poop from a good grade of apple butter.
Where is the "new info" you were attempting to pass on to me in your post?
I suppose just about everybody knows the story of Teddy Roosevelt; but my point was simply that Republicans--in spite of neanderthals like Mark Hanna--made room for progressives in the late 19th and early 20th century.
Mitch McConnell would probably be considered progresssive by the current crop of right wing crazies.
A few years before the Civil War, President Polk was looking for an excuse to steal Mexican Territories North of the Rio Grand. So the U.S. declared war on Mexico, Landed one of the largest forces in History at that time at Vera Cruz and fought its way inland to Mexico City and was too stupid to annex the whole damn country so the U.S. annexed what is now California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Nevada and Utah.
Ever since then the U.S. has been importing Mexicans as cheap labor through the back door and kicking them out the front door when economic times get tough. We sent them packing back to Mexico during the great depression in cattle cars headed south.
As far as the economic impact of illegal aliens, most legitimate studies indicates that more is added to the economy than is taken away when everything is counted. The problem arises because local governments have to bear most of the burden of the negative impacts on the economy without help from the Federal Government and of course low income legal Americans resent having to compete with illegals for jobs and welfare. There's about 1 million grumpy old gringos living in Mexican retirement communities because their limited income goes farther in Mexico. If it reaches 12 million Grumpy old retired Gringos then we will have a new country called Canamexico and everyone will have to learn to speak that peon language that sounds like gibberish, along with French and English.
Nice review.
The republicans and democrats are both guilty on this issue so stop poking at one or the other...they both have their own agendas...like usual.
The only way to stop the flood is to really crack down both on employers and anyone convicted of any crime, including identity theft and deport them. Then come up with a strong, fair guest worker program that allows those who want to work access to those who want to hire them through a legal process. Get rid of the instant citizenship for babies born to those who are already felons by being here illegally.
You want to talk to people who are angry about the illegal issue...talk to those who are patiently slogging through our system trying to be here legally...those folks are really angry.
We are the only country in the world who is so screwed up with their policies towards illegals, naturalized births etc. Try to go to Mexico illegally and demand "rights"...this is truly a double standard.
I'm sorry you see the world thorugh those glasses.
I own a very multi-cultural business and as an employer sponsor folks from several countries including Colombia, Tiawan, China and India at my expense..an H1B visa costs about $4000 that I pay for, so no, I am certainly not opposed to those from other countries wanting to have a piece of the capitalistic economy. I just believe that we are a country of laws, and when a group of individuals determine for themselves that the laws do not apply to them, then we have mob rule. I don't care if you are purple, you are not above the law.
I'm calling BS on your claim that you're not in fact just another teabagger...
On the other hand, I watched as the house across the street got a tear-off, re-sheeting, and new roof, all in one 8 hour day. I heard not one word of English spoken all day. The trash truck had an Anglo name on it, and a construction board license number. All the people were Hispanic. 8 of them. It was all assholes and elbows on a day where the temps only got into the 80s. 1600 sq ft 1960s ranch house got a new roof for five grand, architectual shingles of the 30 year roof life and 1/2 inch CD under it. I will bet the labor got paid cash under that table, maybe a $100 for the day. $1200 for plywood, $800 for labor, $1900 for shingles, and misc. of $300, and the contractor walked away with $800 for his profit for the day. No state taxes withheld, nor federal, no workers comp or unemployment. And a good job, fast, and a one day disruption to the single lady's life. It was a good deal. Except the true cost of labor in a legal transaction was avoided to those who try to be competitive in the legal contracting world. The government employee who owns the house got a new roof, but no money to support the government that pays her salary at the university. Academic salaries are low at state institutions, and the professors are part of the problem. The State is not collecting all the taxes due, and there is not enough money to pay higher salaries. It is a classic "chicken and egg" deal. Only she doesn't see that not only does she get shorted in the salary deal, but those guys on the roof are getting subsidized by someone in rent relief, WIC, food stamps, free education for kids, the list is endless in this country when it comes to what the human welfare agencies will pay for with the money they collect from legitimate business and labor. Berate capitalism, but it is lax border enforcement that is the problem. There are not enough legitimate employers to pay the illegal alien freight and there will be less next month, and the month after. The model is broken. Time for a national sales tax? I wouldn't know. I do know that there is an infrastructure to scam the system, and the above board workers and employers will be fewer and fewer. Unless, of course, you work for government or a government run or owned company. Selling corn dogs to each other only works for a while. Ask AIG. Or Lehman brothers.
Old barebate is a real deep thinker compared to the professors and government employees he disdains in his post..!