Watch here http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate or here:
http://www.netrootsnation.org/node/1850#NNMix

*Freedom From Fear Award Commends 15 “Ordinary People” for Extraordinary
Acts of Courage on Behalf of Immigrants and Refugees; Winners Named at 2011
Netroots Nation Conference*

**(Minneapolis, MN, June 18, 2011) Four DREAM students who walked 1500 miles
from Miami to Washington DC to dramatize the barriers facing undocumented
immigrants. Two men—one American and one South Asian—who rescued trafficked
guest workers from virtual bondage. A police chief who was vilified for
speaking up against local enforcement of federal immigration laws.  An
African American legislator in the Deep South who helped pass a model
anti-racial profiling ordinance, citing the unlawful targeting of immigrants
in his state. LGBTQ and undocumented youth spurring others to come out of
the shadows.

These and other “unsung heroes” are recipients of the first Freedom from
Fear Awards <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/awardees>, honoring
“ordinary people who have committed extraordinary acts of courage on behalf
of immigrants and refugees — individuals who have taken a risk, set an
example, and inspired others to awareness or action.”  Fifteen winners were
announced today at the 2011 Netroots Nation
<http://www.netrootsnation.org/>conference in Minneapolis, MN.

The Awards are particularly fitting on the 50th Anniversary of the Freedom
Rides that helped dismantle segregation in the South, and on the heels of
the Arab Spring that has shown the power of ordinary people overcoming their
fear, said sponsors of the Awards.

The Freedom from Fear Award was created by philanthropic leaders Geri
Mannion and Taryn Higashi <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/about> as a way
of “paying forward” $10,000 they received as co-recipients of the 2009 Robert
W. Scrivner Award for Creative
Grantmaking<http://www.cof.org/templates/content.cfm?ItemNumber=791>,
presented by the Council on Foundations.  Friends and colleagues contributed
additional funds to meet a $100,000 challenge grant from the W.K.Kellogg
Foundation, thus enabling 15 winners to receive $5,000 each and a
commissioned art piece.  The awards were administered and produced by Public
Interest Projects <http://www.publicinterestprojects.org/> (PIP).

Higashi explained the founders’ motivation, “Immigration is a very
controversial issue right now.  We wanted to recognize some of the
incredible unsung heroes who are standing up in their communities—sometimes
at great personal risk—to make this a more just and humane society for
immigrants.”

The new one-time prize attracted 380 nominations from 42 states through
online outreach and word-of-mouth.  “We were so inspired by reading all
these stories—young people risking deportation to educate policy makers,
police officers who resist racial profiling, business people who challenge
their peers,” said Mannion.  “It’s worth celebrating how many courageous
people are working to keep us strong as a nation of immigrants.”

Several Freedom from Fear Award
winners<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/awardees>will speak
during the closing session of Netroots Nation on Saturday, June
18th.  Netroots Nation <http://www.netrootsnation.org/> is an annual
conference that will attract several thousand progressive bloggers and
organizers to Minneapolis this year.

——————————————————————————————————–

*AWARD WINNERS*

*For further information of the award winners, click on each name below (in
some cases, one prize was given to a group of winners working together):*

*Erika Andiola* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/erikaandiola>:
Phoenix, AZ.
Andiola was an honors student at Arizona State University who lost her
scholarships when the state changed its eligibility laws for undocumented
residents. She became one of the leaders of the Arizona DREAM Coalition,
working tirelessly to organize students and to educate powerful elected
officials about the DREAM Act—including U.S. Senators John McCain and Harry
Reid, and Arizona State Senator Russell Pearce—all while risking arrest and
deportation.

*Osfel Andrade* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/osfelandrade>:
Anaheim, CA
Andrade filed a class-action federal lawsuit against his former employer on
behalf of approximately 500 workers demanding back wages for years of
exploitation and discrimination.  The company retaliated by reporting him to
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).  Andrade is courageously
challenging the practice of unscrupulous employers who use the threat of
immigration retaliation to suppress worker rights.

*Xiomara Benitez
Blanco<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/xiomarabenitezblanco>
*: Chapel Hill, NC
Blanco was targeted, sexually harassed and blackmailed by an Immigration
Services officer who threatened her with deportation. Despite the potential
peril and ongoing medical challenges, she filed a complaint, cooperated with
ICE and other agencies and testified against her tormenter in court.  The
case resulted in the officer serving a 12-month jail sentence and drew
attention to the threats immigrants face by unscrupulous agents.

*Maria Bolanos 
Hernandez*<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/mariabolanoshernandez>:
Hyattsville, MD
When she called the police for assistance in a domestic dispute, Bolanos
found herself re-victimized and ensnared in “Secure Communities,” a
controversial immigration enforcement program that checks the immigration
status of everyone brought into a local jail. Unwilling to accept her
deportation as a fait accompli, Bolanos spoke out against the detrimental
effects of Secure Communities on families and community policing.

*Wei Chen, Xu Lin, Bach Tong, *and* Duong Nghe
Le*<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/asap>:
Philadelphia, PA
Beaten repeatedly by other students and ignored by school officials, these
Philadelphia high school students organized a powerful campaign—including an
eight-day boycott and a federal civil rights lawsuit—that finally forced
their school and the district to  protect the safety of Asian immigrant
students. They have since gone on to help lead a citywide campaign for
non-violent schools.

*David Cho* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/davidcho>: South
Pasadena, CA
Cho “came out” as undocumented on the steps of LA City Hall, risking
everything in his life as a successful student and the first Korean American
drum major of the UCLA marching band. He explained to his parents, “Unless
our generation speaks out, the politicians won’t tackle it. They have to see
our faces.”  Cho will be attending UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs to
obtain his master’s degree in Public Policy and ultimately hopes to become a
U.S. Senator one day.

*Jack Harris* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/jackharris>:
Phoenix Arizona
Harris is the former Chief of Police of Phoenix, Arizona who recently
retired after 39 years of service. Harris spoke out at great personal and
professional risk about the importance of protecting the rights and safety
of everyone in the community–including immigrants.  He opposed passage of AZ
Senate Bill 1070 because its requirement for  police to routinely enquire
about the immigration status of residents, on the grounds that it would
effectively end community policing, drain resources from the core mission of
crime-fighting, and lead to possible racial profiling.

*Gene Lefebvre *and *Sarah
Roberts*<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/nomoredeaths>:
Tucson, AZ
Lefebvre and Roberts are co-founders of No More Deaths, which provides
humanitarian aid to those crossing the US-Mexico border. Lefebvre and
Roberts have trained thousands of volunteers to walk the remote trails of
Southern Arizona in scorching heat carrying jugs of water, food and medical
supplies to prevent death and suffering in the desert.

*Chokwe Lumumba* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/chokwelumumba>:
Jackson, MS
Lumumba is an African American member of the City Council of Jackson,
Mississippi with a long history of activism in the civil rights movement.
He wrote and helped to pass a model anti-racial profiling ordinance, citing
the unlawful targeting of immigrants in his state, that has helped to create
a much more positive climate in the city for immigrants.

*Mark Massey* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/markmassey>: Sand
Springs, OK
Massey is a Pentecostal lay minister and the quintessential Good Samaritan
who did not turn away when 53 Indian “guest workers” appealed to him for
aid. He helped them to escape their servitude, housed and fed them. He has
since spent nearly a decade helping more than 500 Indian workers in similar
straits to gain freedom and legal status, first in his native Oklahoma and
later in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Florida.

*Gaby Pacheco, Juan Rodriguez, Felipe Matos and Carlos
Roa*<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/trailofdreams>:
Miami, FL
These four students, two of whom (Juan and Felipe) are openly gay,  walked
1,500 miles from Miami to Washington, DC to bring attention to the barriers
faced by undocumented young people and their families. For five months they
overcame constant fear of arrest and deportation, anti-immigrant protesters
including the Ku Klux Klan, physical exhaustion and homophobia. The Trail of
DREAMs successfully inspired communities throughout the Southeast, as well
as tens of thousands of other DREAMers and policymakers.  In the year since
the Trail concluded at the White House, the four walkers have remained
outspoken leaders against the criminalization of immigrants and for humane
immigration reform.

*Antonella Packard*<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/antonellapackard>:
Saratoga Springs, UT
Packard is a successful Mormon Hispanic businesswoman, Republican and civic
office holder who has been fearless in taking on the conservative
establishment in Utah, aggressively advocating for DREAM Act protesters, the
local Bosnian Muslim community, and other immigrants. She has used her
status to bridge divides across parties and advance immigrant rights in this
conservative state.

*Rigo Padilla, Reyna Wences <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/iyjl>
*and <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/iyjl>*Tania
Unzueta<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/iyjl>
*: Chicago, IL
These three young people formed the Immigrant Youth Justice League after
they successfully stopped the deportation of Padilla in 2009.  Drawing
inspiration from the LGBTQ movement (Tania and Reyna identify as queer) and
past immigrant rights organizing, they organized the first “National Coming
Out of the Shadows Days” and have galvanized DREAM students around the
country to publicly declare themselves “Undocumented and Unafraid.”

*Aby Raju* <http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/abyraju>: Macon, GA
Raju was one of hundreds of guest workers hired by a U.S. company and held
in an isolated labor camp. Along with 250 others, he escaped and traveled on
foot from New Orleans to Washington, DC in the spirit of Gandhi, building
relationships with African Americans along the way.  In DC the workers
launched a 29-day hunger strike and testified in Congress against abusive
labor traffickers. Raju’s four-year efforts have led to national recognition
from the labor movement and the civil rights community about the ugly
realities of the guestworker program.

*Elizabeth Ruiz and Rick
Covington*<http://freedomfromfearaward.com/celebrate/elizabethruizrickcovington>:
Vancouver, WA
These two friends—one an undocumented Latina mother in deportation hearings
and the other a 74-year-old white Navy retiree—have thrown themselves into
building support for immigration reform in their community. They have spoken
at countless events, gone door-to-door to educate neighbors, led voter
registration drives and been arrested in civil disobedience actions.
Together they have sparked a chain reaction of ordinary people in Washington
State standing up for immigrants.

###

—————————————————————————————————–

For further information on this award winner or to schedule an interview,
please contact

   - *Robert Bray* *rb...@publicinterestprojects.org*
   - *Monona Yin* *m...@publicinterestprojects.org*

The Freedom From Fear Awards are produced by Public Interest
Projects,<http://www.publicinterestprojects.org/>(PIP).  PIP is a
non-profit, non-partisan organization that brings together
and strengthens the work of philanthropic institutions, donors, nonprofit
groups and other public interest organizations sharing a vision of a society
that ensures justice, dignity and opportunity for all people.   Statements
and activities of Freedom from Fear Award winners do not necessarily reflect
the views of PIP.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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