Invisible Blackness: The Unique Struggle of the Black Migrant

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Introduction: The Double Bind As we continue Black History Month, we must shine a light on a specific subset of the Black experience: The Black Migrant. Being Black in America is hard. Being an Immigrant in America is hard. Being both is a unique intersection of difficulty that is often ignored in policy debates. Black migrants (from Africa, the Caribbean, and Haiti) face the “Double Punishment.”

Policing and Profiling

  • The Street Reality: A white immigrant with an accent might be viewed with curiosity. A Black immigrant is often viewed with suspicion. They are profiled by police not because of their immigration status, but because of their skin color.
  • The Detention Disparity: Statistics consistently show that Black migrants are detained longer and granted parole less frequently than other groups. We must ask: Why?

The Erasure of the Narrative When the media talks about “immigration,” they usually show images of the Southern Border with Latino families. This erasure hurts Black migrants. It means their specific needs—language access for Wolof or Swahili speakers, cultural competence for African trauma—are overlooked.

  • ELOIM’s Voice: We are the voice for the Ugandan, the Congolese, the Cameroonian. We remind the system that immigration is a Black issue too.

Conclusion: Expanding the Circle Black History is not just American history; it is Global history. This month, let us listen to the stories of the Black Diaspora. Let us understand that the fight for racial justice and the fight for immigrant justice are the same fight. You cannot claim to support Black Lives if you do not support Black Immigrants.

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