1 00:00:00,890 --> 00:00:04,292 Four years after arriving in the United States, 2 00:00:04,292 --> 00:00:06,098 like any typical 16-year old, 3 00:00:06,098 --> 00:00:08,259 I went to get my driver's permit. 4 00:00:09,075 --> 00:00:12,519 After I showed the clerk my immigration papers, my green card, 5 00:00:12,519 --> 00:00:14,225 she told me it was fake. 6 00:00:14,225 --> 00:00:17,159 "Don't come back here again," she said. 7 00:00:17,560 --> 00:00:20,701 That's how I found out I was in America illegally. 8 00:00:20,701 --> 00:00:23,241 And I'm still here illegally. 9 00:00:23,241 --> 00:00:25,021 I'm a journalist and filmmaker. 10 00:00:25,021 --> 00:00:27,311 I live in stories, 11 00:00:27,311 --> 00:00:28,781 and what I've learned 12 00:00:28,781 --> 00:00:31,734 that what most people don't understand about immigration 13 00:00:31,734 --> 00:00:34,539 is what they don't understand about themselves: 14 00:00:34,539 --> 00:00:38,778 their families' old migration stories and the processes they had to go through 15 00:00:38,778 --> 00:00:41,520 before green cards and walls even existed, 16 00:00:41,520 --> 00:00:45,401 or what shaped their understanding of citizenship itself. 17 00:00:45,651 --> 00:00:47,492 I was born in the Philippines. 18 00:00:47,492 --> 00:00:50,698 When I was 12, my mother sent me to live with her parents, 19 00:00:50,698 --> 00:00:51,872 my grandparents, 20 00:00:51,872 --> 00:00:55,072 or, as we say in Tagalog, Lolo and Lola. 21 00:00:55,072 --> 00:00:57,453 Lolo's name was ??. 22 00:00:57,453 --> 00:01:01,711 When he legally emigrated to America and became a naturalized citizen, 23 00:01:01,711 --> 00:01:04,925 he changed his name from ?? to Ted, 24 00:01:04,925 --> 00:01:06,187 after Ted Danson 25 00:01:06,187 --> 00:01:08,102 from the TV show "Cheers." 26 00:01:08,102 --> 00:01:10,550 Can't get any more American than that. 27 00:01:10,739 --> 00:01:14,351 Lolo's favorite song was Frank Sinatra's "My Way," 28 00:01:14,351 --> 00:01:18,670 and when it came to figuring out how to get his only grandson, me, 29 00:01:18,670 --> 00:01:19,703 to America, 30 00:01:19,703 --> 00:01:21,659 he decided to do it his way. 31 00:01:21,659 --> 00:01:25,862 According to Lolo, there was no easy and simple way to get me here, 32 00:01:25,862 --> 00:01:29,354 so Lolo saved up 4,500 dollars -- 33 00:01:29,354 --> 00:01:31,561 that's a lot of money for a security guard 34 00:01:31,561 --> 00:01:33,965 who made no more than eight dollars an hour -- 35 00:01:33,965 --> 00:01:36,833 to pay for the fake green card and for a smuggler 36 00:01:36,833 --> 00:01:38,382 to bring me to the US. 37 00:01:38,382 --> 00:01:39,869 So that's how I got here. 38 00:01:39,869 --> 00:01:43,297 I can't tell you how many times people tell me that their ancestors 39 00:01:43,297 --> 00:01:45,537 came to America "the right way," 40 00:01:45,537 --> 00:01:47,080 to which I remind them, 41 00:01:47,080 --> 00:01:49,528 America's definition of "the right way" 42 00:01:49,528 --> 00:01:53,907 has been changing ever since the first ship of settlers dropped anchor. 43 00:01:55,112 --> 00:01:58,342 America as we know it is more than a piece of land, 44 00:01:58,342 --> 00:02:02,250 particularly because the land that now makes up the United States of America 45 00:02:02,250 --> 00:02:04,964 used to belong to other people in other countries. 46 00:02:05,420 --> 00:02:10,832 America as we know it is also more than a nation of immigrants. 47 00:02:10,832 --> 00:02:14,847 There are two groups of Americans who are not immigrants: 48 00:02:14,847 --> 00:02:17,422 Native Americans, who were indigenous to this land, 49 00:02:17,422 --> 00:02:19,638 and who were killed in acts of genocide; 50 00:02:19,638 --> 00:02:23,412 and African Americans, who were kidnapped, shipped, and enslaved 51 00:02:23,412 --> 00:02:25,915 to build this country. 52 00:02:25,915 --> 00:02:29,809 America is above all an idea, 53 00:02:29,809 --> 00:02:32,157 however unrealized and imperfect, 54 00:02:32,157 --> 00:02:36,237 one that only exists because the first settlers came here freely 55 00:02:36,237 --> 00:02:38,700 without worry of citizenship. 56 00:02:38,700 --> 00:02:41,106 So where did you come from? 57 00:02:41,106 --> 00:02:42,691 How did you get here? 58 00:02:42,691 --> 00:02:43,953 Who paid? 59 00:02:43,953 --> 00:02:46,809 All across America, in front of diverse audiences -- 60 00:02:46,809 --> 00:02:48,377 conservatives and progressives, 61 00:02:48,377 --> 00:02:50,095 high school students and senior citizens -- 62 00:02:50,095 --> 00:02:51,754 I've asked those questions. 63 00:02:51,754 --> 00:02:54,654 As a person of color, I always get asked where I'm from, 64 00:02:54,654 --> 00:02:56,711 as in, "Where are you from from?" 65 00:02:56,711 --> 00:03:00,398 So I've asked white people where they're from from too. 66 00:03:00,398 --> 00:03:03,035 After asking a student at the University of Georgia 67 00:03:03,035 --> 00:03:04,058 where he was from, 68 00:03:04,058 --> 00:03:05,945 he said, "I'm American." 69 00:03:05,945 --> 00:03:08,776 "I know," I said, "but where are you from?" 70 00:03:09,238 --> 00:03:10,956 "I'm white," he replied. 71 00:03:10,956 --> 00:03:14,066 "But white is not a country," I said. 72 00:03:14,066 --> 00:03:16,484 "Where are your ancestors from?" 73 00:03:16,484 --> 00:03:18,355 When he replied with a shrug, 74 00:03:18,355 --> 00:03:19,807 I said, 75 00:03:19,807 --> 00:03:21,755 "Well where did you come from? 76 00:03:21,755 --> 00:03:24,047 How did you get here? Who paid?" 77 00:03:24,643 --> 00:03:26,429 He couldn't answer. 78 00:03:26,429 --> 00:03:29,216 I don't think you can talk about America as America 79 00:03:29,216 --> 00:03:33,206 without answering those three core questions. 80 00:03:33,206 --> 00:03:36,252 Immigration is America's lifeline, 81 00:03:36,252 --> 00:03:39,348 how this country has replenished itself for centuries, 82 00:03:39,348 --> 00:03:43,836 from the settlers and the revolutionaries who populated the original 13 colonies 83 00:03:43,836 --> 00:03:47,700 to the millions of immigrants, predominantly from Europe, 84 00:03:47,700 --> 00:03:49,917 who relentlessly colonized this land. 85 00:03:49,917 --> 00:03:53,221 Even though Native Americans were already here 86 00:03:53,221 --> 00:03:56,559 and had their own tribal identities and ideas about citizenship, 87 00:03:56,559 --> 00:04:02,362 they were not considered US citizens until the 1924 Indian Citizenship Act. 88 00:04:02,362 --> 00:04:07,391 The landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act that Black Americans fought for 89 00:04:07,391 --> 00:04:11,897 inspired the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, 90 00:04:11,897 --> 00:04:15,378 which ended America's race-based exclusionary system 91 00:04:15,378 --> 00:04:18,744 that had lasted for 40 years. 92 00:04:18,744 --> 00:04:20,615 I could go on and on here, 93 00:04:20,615 --> 00:04:24,193 but my point, my larger point, is this. 94 00:04:24,416 --> 00:04:26,301 How much do any of us, 95 00:04:26,301 --> 00:04:29,070 whether immigrants of the past or the present, 96 00:04:29,070 --> 00:04:32,127 know of these crucial parts of American history? 97 00:04:32,356 --> 00:04:36,780 How much of this history makes up the actual US citizenship test? 98 00:04:36,780 --> 00:04:38,054 Have you ever seen it? 99 00:04:38,054 --> 00:04:39,773 It's a mostly oral test, 100 00:04:39,773 --> 00:04:44,493 and government officers ask applicants up to 10 of the 100 questions. 101 00:04:44,651 --> 00:04:48,765 To pass, applicants must get at least six answers right. 102 00:04:48,765 --> 00:04:50,537 I looked at the test recently, 103 00:04:50,537 --> 00:04:53,866 and I was aghast at the questions posed, 104 00:04:53,866 --> 00:04:57,962 what constitutes acceptable answers to the glaring omissions. 105 00:04:57,962 --> 00:05:01,362 There's a question about the Statue of Liberty, where it is. 106 00:05:01,362 --> 00:05:03,882 There's no question about Ellis Island, 107 00:05:03,882 --> 00:05:06,204 about the United States as an immigrant nation, 108 00:05:06,204 --> 00:05:09,546 and the countless anti-immigrant laws that were passed. 109 00:05:09,546 --> 00:05:12,206 There's nothing about Native American history. 110 00:05:12,206 --> 00:05:15,937 There's a question about what Martin Luther King, Jr. did, 111 00:05:15,937 --> 00:05:19,322 but largely there's inadequate and irresponsible contexts 112 00:05:19,322 --> 00:05:21,201 about African Americans. 113 00:05:21,201 --> 00:05:22,517 Here's an example. 114 00:05:22,517 --> 00:05:26,605 Question number 74 under the American history section 115 00:05:26,605 --> 00:05:32,286 asks applicants to "name one problem that led to the Civil War." 116 00:05:32,501 --> 00:05:35,037 There are three acceptable answers: 117 00:05:35,037 --> 00:05:36,913 slavery, 118 00:05:36,913 --> 00:05:38,858 states rights, 119 00:05:38,858 --> 00:05:41,088 economic reasons. 120 00:05:41,677 --> 00:05:44,884 Did my Lola and Lolo get that question? 121 00:05:44,884 --> 00:05:46,603 If they did get the question, 122 00:05:46,603 --> 00:05:49,487 do they even understand the history behind it? 123 00:05:49,646 --> 00:05:52,860 How about my uncles and aunties and cousins 124 00:05:52,860 --> 00:05:55,040 and millions of other immigrants who had to take that test 125 00:05:55,040 --> 00:05:56,947 to become Americans. 126 00:05:56,947 --> 00:05:59,983 What do immigrants know about America before we get here? 127 00:06:00,242 --> 00:06:05,056 What kind of citizenship are we applying for? 128 00:06:05,056 --> 00:06:08,955 And is that the same kind of citizenship we actually want to be a part of? 129 00:06:09,224 --> 00:06:12,116 Come to think of it -- I've been thinking a lot about this -- 130 00:06:12,116 --> 00:06:15,919 what does dignified citizenship look like? 131 00:06:15,919 --> 00:06:20,309 How can I ask for it when I just arrived here 26 years ago, 132 00:06:20,309 --> 00:06:22,267 when Black and Native people 133 00:06:22,267 --> 00:06:24,672 who have been here in America for hundreds of years 134 00:06:24,672 --> 00:06:27,120 are still waiting for theirs? 135 00:06:27,120 --> 00:06:29,720 One of my favorite writers is Toni Morrison. 136 00:06:29,720 --> 00:06:34,641 In 1996, a year before I found out I was in the country illegally, 137 00:06:34,641 --> 00:06:37,671 my eighth grade class was assigned to read "The Bluest Eye," 138 00:06:37,671 --> 00:06:39,379 Morrison's first book. 139 00:06:39,379 --> 00:06:43,661 Instantly, the book challenged me to ask hard questions. 140 00:06:43,661 --> 00:06:47,178 Why does Pecola Breedlove, 141 00:06:47,178 --> 00:06:47,997 this young Black girl at the center of the book, 142 00:06:47,997 --> 00:06:50,944 why did she want blue eyes? 143 00:06:50,944 --> 00:06:52,895 Who told her to want it? 144 00:06:52,895 --> 00:06:55,440 Why did she believe them? 145 00:06:55,440 --> 00:07:00,141 Morrison said she wrote the book to illustrate what happens 146 00:07:00,141 --> 00:07:03,282 when a person surrenders to what she called "the master narrative." 147 00:07:03,507 --> 00:07:09,926 Definitions, Morrison said, belonged to the definers, not the defined. 148 00:07:10,656 --> 00:07:14,028 Once I realized that I was here illegally, 149 00:07:14,028 --> 00:07:18,686 I convinced myself that if I was not a legal citizen by birth or by law, 150 00:07:18,686 --> 00:07:22,703 another kind of citizenship was possible. 151 00:07:22,703 --> 00:07:24,635 Citizenship as participation. 152 00:07:24,635 --> 00:07:26,181 I engage. 153 00:07:26,181 --> 00:07:31,283 I engage with all kinds of Americans, even Americans who don't want me here. 154 00:07:31,283 --> 00:07:33,340 Citizenship as contribution. 155 00:07:33,340 --> 00:07:36,757 I give back to my community in whatever ways I can. 156 00:07:37,042 --> 00:07:40,766 As an undocumented entrepreneur, and yes there is such a thing, 157 00:07:40,766 --> 00:07:43,579 I've employed many US citizens. 158 00:07:43,579 --> 00:07:46,010 Citizenship as education. 159 00:07:46,010 --> 00:07:50,345 We can't wait for others to educate us about the past 160 00:07:50,345 --> 00:07:52,472 and how we got to this present. 161 00:07:52,472 --> 00:07:55,340 We have to educate ourselves and our circles. 162 00:07:55,340 --> 00:08:00,058 Citizenship as something greater than myself. 163 00:08:00,327 --> 00:08:03,262 We are, I think, individually and collectively, 164 00:08:03,262 --> 00:08:06,809 rewriting the master narrative of America. 165 00:08:06,809 --> 00:08:10,093 The people who were once defined are now doing the defining. 166 00:08:10,440 --> 00:08:13,315 They're asking the questions that need to be asked. 167 00:08:13,315 --> 00:08:16,661 A core part of that redefinition is how we define 168 00:08:16,661 --> 00:08:20,786 not only who is an American but what constitute citizenship. 169 00:08:20,786 --> 00:08:25,166 Which, to me, is our responsibility to each other. 170 00:08:25,166 --> 00:08:29,163 So consider your own personal narrative 171 00:08:29,163 --> 00:08:30,347 and ask yourself, 172 00:08:30,347 --> 00:08:31,842 where did you come from? 173 00:08:31,842 --> 00:08:33,525 How did you get here? 174 00:08:33,525 --> 00:08:34,994 Who paid?