By
James S. Irani
This morning, March 30, 2009, I
had the great honor of meeting personally with the New York City Mayor, Michael
R. Bloomberg, on the occasion of the old and traditional Norooz celebration at
his official residence at Gracie Mansion. I had met him before; however, this
morning was a turning point in my judgment of him as he proved to be a practical
and a no non-sense human being, not just a politician.
Himself a descendent of an
immigrant family, he demonstrated many understandings the communities are going
through now. But first, allow me to convey to you his message of great
contribution of immigrants to the New York City community, including those of
Iranians' and diversity which has made New York City a unique fabric of an
outstanding city in the country. Mayor Bloomberg has now made it an official
part of his calendar to annually invite a selected number of community members
for a Norooz breakfast and to express his gratitude for the contribution of
Iranians and other Farsi-speaking people to the New York City and the United
States.
His Honor spoke of Lou Dobbs,
the anti-immigrant and war-monger mouth of the Republican left wing that fear
immigrants will take over the country and drive out its citizens. Mayor
Bloomberg spoke of the facts the immigrants have brought in with their hard work
and tax money. He spoke of well-balanced judges he appoints at the city level.
He spoke of the women's rights and immigrants' rights. He spoke about his former
wife's work in Iran before the 1979 Revolution. He spoke of college-educated
immigrants filling up the state colleges and universities. He cited statistics
which showed 75% of immigrants, even those who are here illegally, paid taxes
which help the city function its daily duties. He even mentioned many of these
people who pay taxes do so with an incorrect Social Security numbers; but, they
do pay taxes. Mayor Bloomberg has parted from his Republican and Democratic
counterparts in supporting an immigration law which could provide legal status
to millions of people having lived here illegally for many years. He indicated
the country would go bankrupt in mass deportation ever takes place.
Mayor Bloomberg signed, in
2003, Executive Order 41, a privacy policy, which "prohibits New York City
agencies from asking about a person's immigration status and from sharing that
information with others." This policy helps to bridge all New Yorkers to vital
City services. He advises New York City residents, clearly addressing the
illegal residents, not to be afraid to go to a doctor, hospital or emergency
room. As a responsible Mayor he openly talks to his people that the government
has not passed any new law about immigrants and that undocumented immigrants can
get medical care in New York City with no fear. He goes on to say that "our
commitment is strong and it is our promise to all undocumented immigrants."
In this past election year when
all politicians walk a tight rope on the immigration issue and no one has the
guts to stand up and speak for nearly 15 million undocumented immigrants in the
country, Mayor Bloomberg is a voice to listen to. He once decided to run as an
Independent for President, but, now he sees the situation as crazy and
pixilated. He is clearly disappointed with the political process. Sending 12
millions people back to their countries after having lived here for many years
just does not make any sense." What Mayor Bloomberg expresses, with no fear from
other politicians, is the voice of the people in the country. People do not
recognize the contributions immigrants have made to our society. Mayor
Bloomberg's message of Norooz to Iranians and his courage to speak out should be
heard by other politicians. Immigrants make communities vibrant and prosperous.
They seek a peaceful life with the lowest crime rate in the country and highest
tax payers therein.
We Iranians should encourage
our politicians to heed to the message of Michael Bloomberg .. We should get
this message to them. We cannot and should not sit idle and let the events take
us with them. We should make the events. We should be part of the events. We
should not let this opportunity slip away from us. We should speak out, we
should vote and we should help shape events. A once-a-year parade is good but
never enough to represent our community. Self-promotion, self-publicity and
individualism do not and have not helped our community grow and be part of the
melting pot. Our cultural, social and political organizations (if any) should
follow consistency in promoting our community not their own agendas. A man of
words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds. We do not do what we want
and yet we are responsible for what we are. We should have a united voice.
About: James S. Irani, an
attorney from New York City, is the president of the Voice of Iranian-Americans
at 347 Fifth Avenue, Suite 908, New York, New York 10016, Tel: (212) 683-7700
... Payvand News - 03/31/09 ... --