End family internment at the border

  • By Will Kronick
  • Tuesday, June 26, 2018 7:09am
  • Opinion

We, the Social Action Working Group of Sukkat Shalom, the Jewish congregation in Juneau, write to demand the immediate end of family internment at the United States’ border with Mexico. Internment camps are not an abstract concept to us. As Jews, our grandparents, family members and others were detained by Nazis just over 70 years ago. We are particularly aware of the isolating and stigmatizing effect that mass internment can have on a minority group. The Trump Administration’s recent change from separating families to detaining them as a whole does not go far enough. Families and their children will remain detained without due process of law.

Jews, like the immigrants coming to our border from Mexico and Central America, were labeled “illegal” and said to “infest” the economy for selfish ends. The use of dehumanizing language likening immigrants to pests and now their wholesale incarceration, follows a familiar pattern. Nazis used an extensive propaganda campaign to dehumanize our forebears to justify their detention. Adolf Hitler and his Nazi regime came to power by democratic means. Unfortunately, the good people of Germany did not stand up when it was early enough to act. Today, we hope we have learned our lesson.

Just as internment camps were created by a democratic process, they can be dismantled by our representative government. We are encouraged by most of Alaska’s statewide delegation opposing family separation and detention. U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, demanded the White House “to end the cruel, tragic separations of families.” Gov. Bill Walker pleaded for the “cruel and counterproductive “separation of families to “end today.” Even U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, rarely a critic of the president, called family separation “heartbreaking.” Child detention and family separation should particularly move our representatives in Alaska. The U.S. government used boarding schools and child removal into the foster care system to oppress Alaska Natives and break their culture.

The words of our elected officials are meaningful, but their actions can halt the government from imprisoning families at our border. The president may have ended child removal, but he has remained intransigent in defending family imprisonment. Thus, we ask our senators, Murkowski and Sullivan, to lead. Please make the next step and demand that family internment end at our border.

For those already mobilizing against the fascism in our midst, thank you for your work. Your toil means a lot, especially to the families unjustly held at our border. For those who have not mobilized but hold family values, please contact our senators. As Americans, we pride ourselves as a beacon of hope to the world. We pray that we earn the blessing of our good name.


• Will Kronick wrote this My Turn on behalf of the Social Action Working Group of Congregation Sukkat Shalom, Juneau.


More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

The headwaters of the Ambler River in the Noatak National Preserve of Alaska, near where a proposed access road would end, are seen in an undated photo. (Ken Hill/National Park Service)
My Turn: Alaska’s responsible resource development is under threat

Oil, mining, and fisheries have long been the bedrock of our state’s… Continue reading

(U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service photo)
My Turn: Alaska fisheries management is on an historical threshold

Alaska has a governor who habitually makes appointments to governing boards of… Continue reading

Win Gruening. (Courtesy photo)
Opinion: Ten years and counting with the Juneau Empire…

In 2014, two years after I retired from a 32-year banking career,… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, addresses a crowd with President-elect Donald Trump present. (Photo from U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan’s office)
Opinion: Sen. Sullivan’s Orwellian style of transparency

When I read that President-elect Donald Trump had filed a lawsuit against… Continue reading

Sunrise over Prince of Wales Island in the Craig Ranger District of the Tongass National Forest. (Forest Service photo by Brian Barr)
Southeast Alaska’s ecosystem is speaking. Here’s how to listen.

Have you ever stepped into an old-growth forest alive with ancient trees… Continue reading

As a protester waves a sign in the background, Daniel Penny, center, accused of criminally negligent homicide in the chokehold death of Jordan Neely, arrives at State Supreme Court in Manhattan on Monday, Dec. 9, 2024. A New York jury acquitted Daniel Penny in the death of Jordan Neely and as Republican politicians hailed the verdict, some New Yorkers found it deeply disturbing.(Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times)
Opinion: Stress testing the justice system

On Monday, a New York City jury found Daniel Penny not guilty… Continue reading

Members of the Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé hockey team help Mendenhall Valley residents affected by the record Aug. 6 flood fill more than 3,000 sandbags in October. (JHDS Hockey photo)
Opinion: What does it mean to be part of a community?

“The greatness of a community is most accurately measured by the compassionate… Continue reading

Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary, at the Capitol in Washington on Monday, Dec. 2, 2024. Accusations of past misconduct have threatened his nomination from the start and Trump is weighing his options, even as Pete Hegseth meets with senators to muster support. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)
Opinion: Sullivan plays make believe with America’s future

Two weeks ago, Sen. Dan Sullivan said Pete Hegseth was a “strong”… Continue reading

Dan Allard (right), a flood fighting expert for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, explains how Hesco barriers function at a table where miniature replicas of the three-foot square and four-foot high barriers are displayed during an open house Nov. 14 at Thunder Mountain Middle School to discuss flood prevention options in Juneau. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Our comfort with spectacle became a crisis

If I owned a home in the valley that was damaged by… Continue reading