By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — I hope the Jewish community, as a community, will
speak up against the unfortunate ordinance passed last night by the suburban
Escondido City Council to prohibit landlords from renting apartments to
undocumented aliens.
The inevitable effect of this ordinance will be discriminatory. A
prospective renter will inquire whether there are any apartments
available. The landlord may ask, "I didn't catch your name,
Mr.___?"
"Hernandez."
"Well, Mr. Hernandez, I'm so sorry. We don't have any now
available. But perhaps we will in six months."
"I need an apartment now, not six months from now."
"Sorry."
A few moments later, the phone will ring again. However, this time, the
prospective renter's name will be Johnson, or Smith, or Harrison, or any other
Anglo sounding name. "Yes," the landlord will say, "we
have one beautiful garden apartment available; so clean it looks like it has
never been lived in."
As former victims of the practice, we Jews know how ugly housing
discrimination can be. For those who lived in San Diego County prior to
the 1960s, even the name "La Jolla" can bring back the awful
humiliation that accompanied refusals based upon our religious/ ethnic
identity.
As a community, we must not stand by as it happens to Mexican-Americans or to
other Americans of foreign birth. We must speak out against this
discriminatory practice and not be fooled by the rhetoric of the
super-patriots who say that such ordinances are needed to combat the problem
of illegal immigration. There are federal laws, and federal agents,
quite capable of dealing with non-citizens who have entered this country
illegally. If they haven't taken action, it is not because local landlords
somehow are responsible. It is because the issue is far more nuanced
than the Escondido nativists believe. People come here to work because they
want to better themselves economically and to secure their family's
futures. If we want to stop illegal immigration from Mexico, let us
share some wealth with that country to create well-paying jobs there. In
the meantime, local landlords should not be intimidated into becoming members
of a posse. Neighbor should not be set against neighbor.
At a very minimum, I hope that Jewish organizations like the Anti-Defamation
League will intervene as "friends of the court" in the lawsuit that
inevitably will be brought against the City of Escondido. I hope also
that organization after organization in the Jewish community, especially the
Jewish Community Relations Committee of the United Jewish Federation as well
as the American Jewish Committee will pass resolutions in opposition to
Escondido's practice. I hope rabbis will speak out from their pulpits..
In short, I hope our community will show it means what it says when it cries,
"Never Again."
Bigots tend to start small, to test the waters, to see what they can get away
with. If no protests are raised, they then will insist on something more
sweeping, hoping that each step of the way, a compliant, acquiescent populace
will grant them legitimacy by not protesting. As we had wished other
communities had come to our aid when our people were under attack in the
Holocaust years, so too must we render similar aid to others.
As an individual, I make this pledge, small and symbolic though it may
be. I WILL NOT SHOP IN ESCONDIDO AS LONG AS THIS ORDINANCE REMAINS ON
THE BOOKS. The sales tax that I pay, whether for a new automobile or for
a concert ticket or for any other item in a store will not support a city
government that would discriminate against my fellow citizens.
Never again! Sí, se puede!