[lg policy] Philadelphia: Attacking immigrant students not new, say those involved

Harold Schiffman haroldfs at GMAIL.COM
Sat Dec 19 21:45:27 UTC 2009


 <http://www.philly.com/philly/gallery/20091218_Attacking_immigrant_students_not_new__say_those_involved.html>

 RELATED STORIES

*Ackerman defends district, apologizes to beaten students*
<http://www.philly.com/philly/hp/news_update/79437092.html>

*Editorial:* What are we teaching our
kids?<http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/79387437.html>

*Letters: *S. Philly High attacks were hate
crimes<http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/79596772.html>

*Anti-Semitism arises at U. Darby
game*<http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/20091218_Anti-Semitism_arises_at_U__Darby_game.html>

*Justice Dept. filing more hate-crime
cases*<http://www.philly.com/philly/news/nation_world/20091218_Justice_Dept__filing_more_hate-crime_cases.html>
   Posted on Fri, Dec. 18, 2009


Attacking immigrant students not new, say those involved

By Kristen A. Graham and Jeff Gammage

Inquirer Staff Writers

Soon after Superintendent Arlene Ackerman arrived in Philadelphia in 2008,
officials set up what was to be a friendly meeting with parents and
representatives from immigrant groups. The meeting lasted two hours and
focused on one issue, according to people present: Immigrants were being
beaten and harassed in city classrooms. What would the district do? Then, in
October last year, five Asian students from South Philadelphia High School
were attacked near the subway station outside the school. Leaders of the
Asian community quietly met with district officials, who promised better
security. A Chinese student group formed.

As that school year unfolded, immigrant students were attacked at Fels,
Furness, and South Philadelphia High Schools. In the summer, members of the
Asian community met with district leaders and the new South Philadelphia
principal. Officials promised to monitor the targeted students, especially
at South Philadelphia, and said conditions would improve, according to
people who attended. But little changed, and on Dec. 3, 30 more Asian
students were attacked. Seven required hospital treatment, and 50 students
launched a boycott that lasted seven days. "This particular incident was
horrible because of the magnitude, but this isn't new," said Zac Steele, an
organizer with Juntos, a South Philadelphia Latino advocacy group. "The
school district knows about all of this. They've known."

Through a spokeswoman, Ackerman said she had put fixes in place after her
first meeting with the immigrant community - more translators and bilingual
security officers. No one told her more was needed. "To her understanding,
things had been put in place and there weren't any great issues
outstanding," spokeswoman Evelyn Sample-Oates said. "She didn't know of any
breakdown, that there were issues remaining. A big part of this is that a
lot of the students don't report violence because they're afraid." While the
latest confrontation involved mostly African American students allegedly
beating Asian students, immigrants of all races have long felt unsafe in
city schools, dozens of students, recent graduates, teachers, and activists
said in interviews.

Immigrants are easy targets, said Wei Chen, a South Philadelphia senior and
president of the South Philadelphia High School Chinese-American Student
Association. "They think the new students cannot speak the language and will
not report [the assault] to the school," he said through an interpreter.
"Most immigrants at South Philly High, if not all of them, have been
intimidated or beaten up," said a newcomer from Honduras, a recent graduate.
As manager of Boat People SOS-Delaware Valley Branch, Nancy Nguyen has
worked with Vietnamese youths who attend South Philadelphia High, where, she
said, there's conflict between immigrant and native-born students. "They get
laughed at when they try to speak English," she said. "And the really
heart-wrenching things are the small physical attacks. They get tripped when
they walk down a hallway."

The problem has been particularly acute in South Philadelphia, where the
Asian population has been growing for years and where Spanish-speaking
immigrants have in recent years begun to settle. Massive South Philadelphia
High, at Broad and Snyder, is a complicated place - five stories and about
900 students, 84 percent of them needy. One in four needs special-education
services. Southern, as it is known, has had four principals in five years.
About 70 percent of its students are African American, 18 percent Asian, 6
percent Hispanic, and 5 percent white. Twelve percent are considered
"English-language learners," representing at least 18 languages. The most
commonly spoken of them are Chinese dialects, Vietnamese, Spanish, and
Cambodian.

District officials admit the problem has deep roots. Two recent graduates of
South Philadelphia High from Honduras stressed that the violence isn't
limited to Asian students. The two asked that their names be withheld
because they lack documents to live in the U.S. legally. "You always felt
like you were in danger," one said. "You have to be dressing similar to the
other kids, or talking like them, or you get jumped," the second added.
Shortly after the first student arrived in the United States and registered
at South Philadelphia, he was in the lunch line when an African American
student motioned to him and said something. The student didn't know that the
young man wanted to cut in front of him in line. He just stood there. The
other boy punched him.

"I didn't want to the tell the police," he said. "I was too afraid." South
Philadelphia High's second floor has mostly been devoted to English for
Speakers of Other Languages classes. To immigrant students, the floor felt
like a haven of quiet and learning in an otherwise chaotic building. This
year, teachers said, new principal LaGreta Brown told them that she wanted
to end the second-floor arrangement. "If you don't have a system where
everyone's integrated, there are problems," said Michael Silverman, the
regional superintendent. The enclave also stirred resentment, teachers said.
"There's resentment for people who would love to have the same sense of
community, the same sense of calmness," said the teacher, who asked not to
be identified for fear of reprisal. On other floors, students walk out of
class "with no fear. They have nothing to lose. It's chaos," the teacher
added.

While some meaningful learning does go on at the school, "it can be bleak."
Even before the attacks, overall violence and assaults at the school were up
over the same period from the year before, and the school was on the state's
"persistently dangerous" list, a designation under the federal No Child Left
Behind law. But the problem stretches back decades. Lai Har Cheung was 8
when her family settled near the Italian Market in the early 1980s, among
the first Asians to move into what was a largely white neighborhood.The
harassment started immediately, she said. Cheung said she had heard racial
slurs daily - kids would bang on her family's door and run. Her house was
pelted with eggs. She was beaten by flute-wielding student.

She felt powerless, she said. "You begin to think that's the norm, that
everyone gets initiated that way," Cheung said. "It was emotional,
psychological harassment." Cheung, now 33 and a child advocate and mentor,
said the cycle should have stopped with her generation. Jan Ting, a Temple
University law professor who studies immigration, said newcomers often
suffered. "You can't do anything about your race. And you really can't do
anything about your accent. It's bad enough you look different than anybody
else, but you sound different, too," Ting said. Duong Thang Ly, a senior
from Vietnam, said his issue was not with the attackers, but with the
adults. "No one in school helped us get along with each other, and that led
to the situation getting worse," Ly said.

Now back in school, the boycotting teens were promised more security and
programs to help students from different backgrounds get along. But they
returned saying they were "suspending" their boycott, and plans remain for a
federal civil-rights complaint. "They still have concerns," Helen Gym, a
board member of Asian Americans United, said of the students. "They're
keeping their options open."



http://www.philly.com/philly/education/79596267.html?viewAll=y



-- 
=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+

Harold F. Schiffman

Professor Emeritus of
Dravidian Linguistics and Culture
Dept. of South Asia Studies
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305

Phone:  (215) 898-7475
Fax:  (215) 573-2138

Email:  haroldfs at gmail.com
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/

-------------------------------------------------
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/lgpolicy-list/attachments/20091219/49b42982/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
_______________________________________________
This message came to you by way of the lgpolicy-list mailing list
lgpolicy-list at groups.sas.upenn.edu
To manage your subscription unsubscribe, or arrange digest format: https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/listinfo/lgpolicy-list


More information about the Lgpolicy-list mailing list