How the fear of the “other” is a history lesson we never bother to teach and, therefore, never learn. This program is presented by Sarah Yore-Van Oosterhout of the Lighthouse Immigrant Advocates.
About Sarah Yore-Van Oosterhout: Sarah completed her undergraduate studies at Calvin College. During her time there, she studied abroad, volunteered in Grand Rapids schools, tutored adults in GED programs, and worked with immigrant mothers at Cherry Street Medical Clinic, all the time putting to good use her Spanish language fluency and social work training. Sarah attended the Michigan State University College of Law, devoting herself to the study of immigration and public interest law. Following law school, Sarah, her husband, and young daughter moved to Mexico for a year where her husband completed his doctoral research. In the fall of 2013, Sarah started work at the Diocese of Grand Rapids, Immigration Legal Services, serving as one of two full-time attorneys. She tackled a wide variety of family-based immigration cases and grew accustomed to handling a high volume caseload while still offering high quality legal services. Sarah left the Diocese of Grand Rapids in December 2014 and soon discovered for-profit legal services were not what Holland immigrants needed. And so, she pioneered Lighthouse Immigrant Advocates. In addition to her work at Lighthouse, Sarah is the West Side Co-chair for MCIRR.
Thursday, January 9
7:00 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
Holland Museum
Free, donations appreciated
Sponsored by:
The exhibit, “THEM: Images of Separation,” is courtesy of the the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University