Stories

Stories

U.S. Immigration Policy Forces Talented PhDs to Leave the Country, Says Wash U Chancellor

U.S. Immigration Policy Forces Talented PhDs to Leave the Country, Says Wash U Chancellor

As the chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, for more than two decades, Mark Wrighton has seen countless talented international students graduate from his institution and then be pushed out of the country. “We train our students to become leaders in their fields, only to send them… Read More

Immigration Policies Are Stifling the Growth of this Miami-Based Digital Marketing Firm

Immigration Policies Are Stifling the Growth of this Miami-Based Digital Marketing Firm

EveryMundo, a technology company who creates products and services to drive qualified traffic directly to airlines’ websites, has experienced tremendous growth in the last five years. Despite employing 45 people and partnering with 20 international airlines, U.S. immigration policy continues to frustrate its founders, Seth Cassel and Anton Diego, who employ international employees to assist… Read More

Immigrant Professor Aims to Solve Dental Health Issues Costing Americans $60 Billion per Year

Immigrant Professor Aims to Solve Dental Health Issues Costing Americans $60 Billion per Year

Shortly after the Chinese Cultural Revolution — a decade that saw the brutal persecution of intellectuals — China reversed course and started seeking foreign brainpower to help salvage its ravaged economy. As part of Deng Xiaping’s sweeping economic reforms, the state began sending its most promising students to overseas universities. Read More

Utah Is Begging for Workers Then ‘Making Them Hide in the Shadows,’ Says Senior Citizen Activist

Utah Is Begging for Workers Then ‘Making Them Hide in the Shadows,’ Says Senior Citizen Activist

Dee Rowland remembers when she first realized how large the Hispanic immigrant population in Utah really was. “We started having masses in Spanish, and people just came out of the woodwork,” Rowland says. “We just didn’t realize how many people were here until they started filling our churches.” Rowland is… Read More

Southern Baptist Seminary President Says Christians Should be at the “Forefront of Calling for Immigration Reform”

Southern Baptist Seminary President Says Christians Should be at the “Forefront of Calling for Immigration Reform”

The Economist calls Dr. Albert Mohler “one of America’s most influential Evangelicals.” As chief executive officer and president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (SBTS) in Louisville, Kentucky—the flagship school of the Southern Baptist Convention and one of the largest seminaries in the world—he oversees an institution with… Read More

Retiree to Immigrants: Prescott, Arizona, is ‘Everybody’s Home Town’

Retiree to Immigrants: Prescott, Arizona, is ‘Everybody’s Home Town’

Every Friday in Prescott, Arizona, retiree Dennis Duvall stands in the town center holding an 8-foot-long red banner that proclaims “Immigrants and Refugees Are Welcome.” “Immigration has been a big issue here in Arizona,” Duvall explains. “Because of our border here with Mexico, it has been virtually divisive. Arizona is… Read More

Syrian Biotech Grad Ready to Aid U.S. Cancer Research

Syrian Biotech Grad Ready to Aid U.S. Cancer Research

When Alnairouz “Nairouz” K. first arrived in America to study biotechnology and genetics at West Virginia State University, the transition was hard. Her family remained behind in Syria, and Nairouz struggled to adapt. “When I came here, everyone spoke English with a different accent, and they spoke very fast,” she… Read More

Immigrants Bring Creative and Economic Capital

Immigrants Bring Creative and Economic Capital

To Dominican Republic native Pamela Gomez, the reason immigrants help the economy is a no-brainer. “We are so creative, and we come with cultural and economic capital, with so many different understandings,” she says. Gomez, a graduate student in Latin American and Caribbean Studies at the University of South Florida,… Read More

Priest: Love ‘the God We Cannot See by Loving the Neighbor We Can’

Priest: Love ‘the God We Cannot See by Loving the Neighbor We Can’

To Father Phil Egitto, the Bible is crystal clear about immigration. “The message of the Gospel is entirely about loving the God we cannot see by loving the neighbor we can,” he says. “That includes the immigrant, and the refugee, and the foreigner, as our scriptures remind us that we… Read More

Mexican-American Creates Services for an Aging Population

Mexican-American Creates Services for an Aging Population

Mary A. Gloria was inspired to found the Pan de la Vida Foundation by her Catholic faith and her Mexican heritage. As a devout Catholic, Gloria believes in Jesus’ teaching to help those in need. As the daughter of immigrants, she grew up around newcomers who spent their days working… Read More

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