Jessica's Mission

Hello, welcome to my site, my name is Jessica Ordenana-Papa. I am in the process of starting a Non~Profit Organization that will be named K.i.D -Kids of International Deportees. A program that will reach out to children of deportee's. Not everyone is aware of what an epidemic this situation has become. I will offer help for these children with social, financial, employment, education, legal & mental health services. In addition, to have a place young children & adolescents can talk to other kids in the same situation & most importantly keep in touch with their parent(s). This all comes from a personal experience with my mother & how badly it affected my siblings & I. There are many children that are affected by their parent(s) mistake's. Making their own children statistic's, caused to be judged. Making life harder than it is. Most have to start working at a young age, having to mature ahead of time, losing their childhood. Like I did at the age of fifteen! Now believe me pitty is the last thing a child in this situation needs! A child need's support, guidance, nurturing & counseling environment. Unfortunately for some children, they either have 50% of that support or little to none. For whatever the reason may be. They are not victims, they are just lost. Please help me, spread the word to everyone. If you or someone you know have been, was and or will be affected by their parent(s) being deported. Please contact me. Our first step will be interviewing children between the grade(s) 3rd through High School. The child must have supporting documents to show the parent(s) absence and reside in Tristate area. I have two locations in a location in Manhattan & the Bronx. Best, Jessica, child of a deportee! Email: jesscares@live.com Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/jessica-papa/52/5b1/588/ Twitter: @KiDorg Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/KiD/442048112507330 MY SUPPORT TEAM: Victor J. Papa, President & Director of Two Bridges Neighborhood Council~ http://www.twobridges.org/ Director of Immigrant Social Service~ http://www.issnyonline.org/index-6.html Board Member of Hamilton Madison House~ http://www.hmhonline.org/ Mark Handelman, Executive Director of Hamilton Madison House~ http://www.hmhonline.org/ Frank Modica, Chairman of Two Bridges Neighborhood Council~ http://www.twobridges.org/ Dr. Rosa Gil, Ceo/Founder of Comunilife~ http://www.comunilife.org/ Michael Musa, Immigration Lawyer~ http://www.musa-obregon.com/ Dr. Juan Carlos Dumas, Psychologist~ http://juancarlosdumas.com/

Thanks to LatinaLista.com Publisher who forwarded me this inspiring email. Please read the following:

‘POV Short Cuts’ Tell Timely Stories of the American Dream: Civil Rights Heroes, Latino Immigrants and the Power of Families, Thursday, Aug. 9, 2012 on PBS

Sneak previews available on PBS Moblie apps for iPad and iPhone of Sin País (Without Country) starting Friday, July 27 and The Barber of Birmingham on Friday, Aug. 3.

Lineup Includes Academy Award® Nominee, Student Academy Award® Winner and StoryCorps Animations

Sin Pais
The Mejia-Perez family before the parents’ deportation. Photo: Theo Rigby


POV (Point of View), the award-winning nonfiction film series celebrating its 25th year on PBS in 2012, brings the popular POV Short Cuts back to the schedule with a new collection of short documentaries. These diverse films tell stories of hard-fought and hard-won civil rights battles, a family’s separation after deportation and lessons learned from parents. The five short films include an Academy Award® nominee, The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement; a Student Academy Award® winner, Sin País (Without Country); and three new animated shorts from the Peabody Award-winning StoryCorps oral-history project.

The one-hour POV Short Cuts premieres on Thursday, Aug. 9, 2012 at 10 p.m. on PBS. (Check local listings.) The program then streams on the POV website from Aug. 10 - Sept. 9.


Sin País (Without Country) by Theo Rigby
Winner of a 2012 Student Academy Award®, Sin País (Without Country) explores one family’s experience as members are separated by deportation. Nearly 20 years ago, Sam and Elida Mejia escaped a violent civil war in Guatemala and brought their one-year-old son, Gilbert, to California. The Mejias settled in the Bay Area, worked multiple jobs and saved enough to buy a home. They had two more children, both U.S. citizens, and lived the American Dream.

Two years ago, Sam, Elida and Gilbert, all undocumented, became deeply entangled in the U.S. immigration system. Sin País (Without Country) begins two weeks before the parents’ scheduled deportation date. After a passionate fight to keep their family together, they are deported back to Guatemala. The film chronicles the Mejias’ new reality as a separated family—parents without their children, and children without their parents. (Length: 19 mins.)

Theo Rigby, Director/Producer
Theo Rigby’s work has focused on topics ranging from the war in Iraq to the justice system, and for the past six years he has been making films about immigration issues in the United States. His short films have screened in film festivals across the globe; Close to Home was a national finalist in the 2009 Student Academy Awards and won a Golden Eagle Award and special jury mention at the 2010 Ashland Independent Film Festival.

Rigby’s photographs have been published in Newsweek, The New York Times, National Geographic France, People and many other national and international publications. His still photographs have also been exhibited at San Francisco City Hall and at the 2005 Visa Pour l’Image festival in France. Rigby recently graduated with a master of fine arts degree in documentary film from Stanford University.


The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement by Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday
In the days before and after Barack Obama’s victory in the 2008 presidential election, an 85-year-old civil rights activist and “foot soldier” looked back on the early days of the movement in this Academy Award®-nominated short. World War II veteran James Armstrong was the proud proprietor of Armstrong’s Barbershop, a cultural and political hub in Birmingham, Ala., for more than 50 years. Among his clients was Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. In this small establishment, where every inch of wall space was covered in newspaper clippings and black-and-white photographs, hair was cut, marches organized and battle scars tended. Armstrong, who carried the American flag across the Selma bridge during the Bloody Sunday march for voting rights in 1965, links the struggles of activists of the past with a previously unimaginable dream: the election of the first African-American president. Armstrong passed away on Nov. 18, 2009, at the age of 86. An Official Selection of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival. (Length: 21 mins.)

Note: Filmmaker Robin Fryday; Shirley Gavin Floyd, business manager for the Civil Rights Activist Committee in Birmingham; and James Armstrong’s grandson Darren Armstrong are available for interviews.

Robin Fryday, Director/Producer
Robin Fryday, born and raised in Chicago, is a photographer based in Marin County, north of San Francisco. Her career as a child photographer spans almost 20 years and is linked to a commitment to use her work to help underprivileged children. Fryday co-founded and co-chairs the Bay Area Heart Gallery, a collaboration between photographers and public and private child adoption agencies. Her photographs have been used to raise money for nonprofit agencies designed to feed and school the impoverished in Peru, India, Bhutan and, most recently, Haiti. Fryday also runs an annual photography camp designed to teach teenagers photographic skills. The Barber of Birmingham is her first documentary film.

Gail Dolgin, Director/Producer
The late Gail Dolgin was best known for Daughter From Danang, which follows a Vietnamese mother and her Ameriasian daughter as they reunite after a 22-year separation. The film was nominated for an Academy Award and won the 2002 Sundance Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary. While working on The Barber of Birmingham, Dolgin, who had battled breast cancer for years, knew it would be her last film. She passed away in October 2010.


StoryCorps
The Peabody Award-winning oral-history project StoryCorps brings intimate conversations among friends and families to life in touching, often hilarious animated shorts that are sure to strike a chord in all of us. Funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Facundo the Great – Ramòn “Chunky” Sanchez recounts how the new kid at school became a hero when his teachers could not find a way to anglicize his name. (Length: 1 min.)

Eyes on the Stars – Carl McNair tells the story of his brother Ronald, an African-American kid in the 1950s who set his sights on the stars. (Length: 2 mins.)

A Family Man – In 1955, John L. Black, Sr. started his job as a janitor for the Cincinnati public school system. He regularly put in 16-hour days to provide for his wife and 11 children. His son Samuel talks with his wife, Edda Fields-Black, about his father’s lasting legacy and the power of a look. (Length: 3 mins.)


Now on DVD: StoryCorps Animated Shorts is a collection of shorts featured on POV, from a heartwarming conversation between a boy with Asperger’s syndrome and his mom to two Brooklyn characters remembering how they fell in love to a feisty grandmother regaling her family with tales from her youth. Pulled from more than 40,000 audio interviews recorded by StoryCorps and archived in the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, each story captures the poetry, grace and wisdom found all around us if we take the time to listen. Visit www.shoppbs.org.

Visit POV’s Pressroom for an embeddable trailer, press materials, downloadable photos, special features and more.