By Guillermo Camarillo, Communications Intern, Stanford in Government Program Recipient

To honor DACA’s fifth anniversary, the ACLU of Illinois has launched a storytelling project featuring DACA recipients. We hope that by telling these stories, we give agency to more people to tell their own story and challenge the harmful rhetoric coming from the Trump Administration. Here is our last story of this series:

ESTEFANIA

When I was little, I remember going with my parents to the doctor to translate for them. I was a little kid translating important medical advice and terms to my parents. This experience inspired me to pursue a career in medicine. I would like to be an internal medicine doctor. I would like to work closely with Latino communities while at the same time addressing the many socioeconomic barriers to quality healthcare that these communities face. I hope to work closely with patients, help them get involved in their own health and well-being, and build close connections with the community. My goal is to synchronize social justice, public health, and medicine in my career.

DACA has granted me the opportunity to pursue a higher education and explore all kinds of opportunities. Not only has it allowed me to become the first person in my family to graduate from college but it has also allowed me to participate in opportunities such as presenting my research at national conferences, shadowing physicians in hospitals, and also volunteering at my local community clinic. DACA, overall, will allow me to continue pursuing my interests as a life-long learner, and continue making contributions in my community. All of the opportunities I have been part of because of DACA is what has helped me develop into an individual that continuously seeks to grow, learn, and challenge herself.

Before DACA, I was working at a restaurant where I was underpaid and was sexually harassed without being able to do anything about it. Being undocumented leaves you vulnerable to all kinds of exploitation and abuse. It means that others can take advantage of you and threaten you without you being able to stand up for yourself.

After getting DACA, I quit that job and found a job where I was respected and my work is valued. If DACA was to be repealed, it would be the end to my career aspirations. I would be immediately disqualified from everything I’ve worked so hard to pursue: medical school, traveling, a living wage, etc. I would be a college educated individual that will likely not be able to have a job or pursue her career goals. I would go back to feeling vulnerable all the time, after fighting so hard to get away from that feeling.

Date

Thursday, August 31, 2017 - 12:30pm

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By Guillermo Camarillo, Communications Intern, Stanford in Government Program Recipient

To honor DACA’s fifth anniversary, the ACLU of Illinois has launched a storytelling project featuring DACA recipients. We hope that by telling these stories, we give agency to more people to tell their own story and challenge the harmful rhetoric coming from the Trump Administration. Here is one story:

SURI

I currently attend Harold Washington College. I am interested in majoring in Latin American studies or an area that involves public policy. I didn’t know about my history or where I came from until I took a class on Latin American studies. This class woke up something inside of me that has pushed me to pursue a career in these areas.

I would like to one day work for a non-profit. When I was little, I used to be part of an organization called “Soccer for Success”. It was a program that will offer mentorship and gear to youth to play soccer. This program helped so many kids in my community and even has impacted both my family and myself. However, this program has struggled financially. It is hard to know that programs like these are constantly fighting to stay alive, yet do so much for communities. Seeing this has inspired me to dedicate my life to ensuring that non-profits continue to provide services to communities like my own.

When I first got DACA, the changes were immediate. I was able to do things that I was not able to do before. I was able to take part of programs and be paid for being part of those programs. I interned at a Chicago public library and the Adler Planetarium. I also like volunteering and DACA has allowed me to volunteer in places that require background checks.

Overall, DACA has allowed me to see more potential for myself. It has allowed me to feel secure and has granted me opportunities I would have never had before. To have it taken away would hurt more to have never had it in the first place. They gave it to us - we now know how much we could do. To have it taken away so suddenly will definitely hurt.

 

Date

Wednesday, August 30, 2017 - 10:30am

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