Irish grandmother gets green card
THE PLIGHT OF Irish people currently living in the US
without a green card is a long-running issue but one nonegenarian woman living
in Chicago could hardly have believed that it would be of concern to her life.
Josephine Stout, who only knew that she had arrived in
Chicago from Ireland as a small baby in the 1920s, always believed herself to
be an American citizen. However, her astonishing case has been highlighted by
the Chicago Tribune – the paper ran a lengthy feature on her story on Christmas
Day. In it, author Dawn Turner Trice
recounts how Stout only realised that she was in citizenship limbo when her
daughter was murdered and Stout became responsible for her young grandchildren.
What followed was a 12-year battle to establish that Stout
was a rightful long-term resident of the USA and entitled to the supports and
help needed to care for her grandchildren. She had a Social Security card from
her time working at a fur company from the age of 17 until her own children
were born – but as it turned out, no proof that she was actually a US citizen.
The whole odyssey is worth reading here - it traces the
journey needed to establish where Josephine had come from, how she had arrived
in the US and whether her parents ever even became US citizens themselves. In
the course of the investigation, Josephine discovers she was born in March 1922
in a poorhouse in Limerick but her parents managed to bring her on board with
them on a ship bound for Chicago 18 months after her birth, set for a new life.
There is good news for Josephine – she was finally issued
with a green card in September of last year, and on 13 December this year, had
her application to become a full US citizen kickstarted. She should become a
citizen within a few months.
Stout’s reaction? “I just can’t see how a piece of paper
will make me feel more American than I already do.”