CALL
TO ACTION – SOLIDARITY REQUEST
Standing in Solidarity with our
fellow immigrant community!
Immigrants enter 8th day of Hunger Strike
We will not stand
and watch our friends, our neighbors; our brothers and sisters; our families die
due to lack of “papers” and medical care. We denounce the racism and disempathy
that exists within medical institutions here in Chicago. Institutions like University
of Illinois and Loyola Medical hospitals are complicit and responsible for the
death of people who are refused medical care due to their immigration status.
Today we make
responsible these two medical institutions ( University of Illinois and Loyola)
for the health of the 5 hunger strikers (Sonia Lopez 47, Lorenzo Arroyo 36,
Catalina Arroyo 53, Hilda Burgos 45, Fr. Jose Landaverde 43) in addition to the
lives of the 3 individuals (Jorge Mariscal 24, Lorenzo Arroyo 36, and Elfego
Arroyo 37) who are in need of urgent medical care and organ transplant.
With this CALL TO
ACTION, we ask for solidarity and support from social justice advocates and
those fighting for a more just world. We reach out to our allies, supporters,
community organizations, grassroots organizations, and everyone fighting
against the 1% (Corporations and Institutions that choose and exist for profit
over people)
Today, we add the
administrators and boards of institutions like Rush, University of Illinois and
Loyola medical hospital to the 1% list.
We say NO to profit
over people,
We say YES to
empathy and solidarity
We say YES to people’s
power and NO to racist institutions that systematically oppress marginalize
communities.
WHAT: CALL TO ACTION to ALL COMMUNITY
GROUPS, ORGANIZATIONS, INDIVIDUALS, THE 99%!
MASSIVE GATHERING
OF SOLIDARITY, ACTION ANNOUNCEMENT TO CONTINUE THE HUNGER STRIKE
WHEN:
Sunday, June 10th 2012 at 12pm (noon)
WHERE:
3442 W. 26th St. Chicago IL 60623
WHO:
Immigrant rights
groups, community organizations, grassroots activists/groups, individuals who
will join forces with the hunger strikers!
In Solidarity,
Our Lady of
Guadalupe Mission and Moratorium On Deportations Campaign (MDC)
*****Join us in
solidarity by attending the CALL TO ACTION on Sunday June 10 at 12noon and by
e-mailing your organization’s name (note of support) to: MoratoriumOn...@gmail.com******
Background:
Taken from the
Chicago reporter by Yana Kunichoff.
On Sunday at 11 am, Sonia Lopez,
Hilda Burgos and Lorenzo Arroyo [Catalina Arroyo and Fr. Jose Landaverde] stopped
eating. The three started a hunger strike to demand medical treatment for
family members who have been denied a spot on the organ transplant list because
they are undocumented.
And as a result, says Burgos, these
loved ones are slowly dying.
Each of the hunger strikers has an
experience related to transplants. Sonia Lopez’s son, Jorge, lost one kidney to
kidney cancer and his second is diseased. Arroyo’s brother is in need of a
liver transplant.
Burgos has the most hopeful
story--her son was able to get a transplant after her sister volunteered to
donate a kidney.
“We as mothers don’t want our kids to
die,” said Burgos. Sonia Lopez first took the decision to go on a hunger
strike, and “we are supporting her because we know what it is like.”
The barriers and hurdles to getting
transplants for undocumented immigrants are varied, and depend on individual
situations.
Firstly, Burgos says, a valid social
security number is essential to getting on the transplant list.
In her case, her sister’s organ
donation meant that her son didn’t have to worry about the list.
Burgos says that with a donation from
Rush Hospital, which agreed to do her son’s transplant, and the post-operation
medicine offered at a discount from Cook County Hospital, her son was able to
get a new kidney.
She says that it is not impossible to
save Jorge’s life, but it is essential to get the approval of a hospital to do
the transplant.
Guidelines on transplants answer few
questions about whether immigrants, undocumented or otherwise, can receive
organs, according to a 2008 study by
Charu Gupta with the American Medical Association. Along with “indirect
exclusion” through a lack of insurance coverage, undocumented immigrants rarely
receive transplants when they need them.
Burgos said that Lopez and her son
had tried several hospitals, all of which had refused to take Jorge.
Research shows that between 1988 and
2007, undocumented immigrants contributed 2.5 percent of all donations, while
only receiving 0.63 percent of the organs.
Jorge Lopez, who Burgos says is in
serious condition, came to the United States at the age of 1. She calls it a
cruel irony that though he was able to graduate high school, the constant
dialysis for his kidney had made him too weak to attend college or contribute
to the country he has lived in practically his entire life.
Burgos says that the community is
willing to help Sonia Lopez and Lorenzo Arroyo raise money to fund the needed
operations. But she stresses that the target of the hunger strike is the
hospitals-–if they can agree, she says, the money won’t be an obstacle.
“Everybody from the community can
help with that.”
And until the hospitals come to a
decision, she says, they won’t be taking any breakfast, lunch or dinner.
© Community Renewal Society 2012
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