National Immigrants Day: Two Immigration Stories From the ARM Industry

October 28,
2021 is National Immigrants day. Immigrants make an impact in the ARM industry every
day. Here are two of their stories:

Aylix
Jenson- Attorney, Moss and Barnett

I
was born in Cape Town, South Africa. My
great-grandparents emigrated from Germany, Poland and Lithuania to South Africa
and avoided the Nazi persecution. Having decided to leave Poland, my paternal
great-grandfather went to the nearest port, intending to take the first
available ship. There were two ships in the port at the time. One ship was
going to Mexico and the other ship was going to South Africa. The ship to South
Africa left first. Two generations
later, my parents, older sister and I emigrated from South Africa to the United
States.

We
immigrated after a group claiming retaliation for United States attacks on
Afghanistan bombed a New York-style deli just a few miles from our family home
in Cape Town. As a child living in South Africa, I had enormous feelings of
uncertainty and insecurity, and I remember feeling incredibly relieved when my
parents told me we would be emigrating to the United States. 

Six
weeks after we arrived in the US, 9/11 occurred. I remember the feelings of fear and
insecurity were rekindled when I watched images repeatedly flashing on
television of planes flying into the Twin Towers, and the collapse of the
buildings. I began to wonder as a child where in the world I would ever be
safe.

Rebuilding
my sense of safety began when I started drawing with sidewalk chalk on the
driveway of my family’s home in Rochester, Minnesota, something I could not do
in South Africa due to high crime rates. My safety net expanded to learning to
ride a bicycle, another activity I was unable to do in South Africa. As my
world broadened and my freedom expanded, I realized that my initial fear of the
similarities between what I left in South Africa and what I found in the US
were unfounded. I recognized how lucky I was to be in the US and the endless
opportunities that were available to me and my family.

My
family was able to enter the US because both of my parents applied for the
Diversity Immigrant Visa Program. While only a small number of applicants from
around the world are successful, my mother was one of the lucky lottery
winners. I do not know how many applicants filed for the visa when my parents
entered the lottery, but current statistics indicate that there were 50,000
winners from a pool of more than 23.3 million applications.

In
February 2008, my family and I went through the naturalization process and
became citizens. June of this year marked my 20th year of living in the United
States and to this day, I remain just as grateful to be a citizen.


Amir Erez
– President and Owner, Cedar Financial Services

In
1987 my family immigrated to the United States. I was the middle child at 17,
my sisters were 11 and 22. My father had obtained a work permit here and was
employed as a mechanic experienced at repairing industrial sewing machines,
while my mother worked as a seamstress. Neither of my parents spoke English, yet still made the bold decision to
move our family to the United States. Our first home here was a two-bedroom apartment in “not the best
neighborhood” of Los Angeles. It was so small for our family that I slept on
the floor. 

Shortly after we arrived in the
United States, debt collection notices directed to my aunt were being sent to
our home. My aunt, however, did not live
with us. Because my parents did not speak English they asked me to review the
collection notices. I called the collection agency that sent them and explained
that my aunt did not reside there. I
thought that my call would be well-received, but instead a very aggressive
collector at the agency stated that opening my aunt’s mail was a federal crime
and that he would report me to “the authorities”. He immediately hung up on
me. Because my citizenship application
was pending at this time, I was terrified and angry thinking I had just
jeopardized my opportunity to become a U.S. citizen by trying to do the right
thing.

After college, I decided to open my
own collection agency, Cedar Financial. I vowed that I would never allow the
use of false threats or abuse to collect money at my agency. My agency would put people first. In the early
days of Cedar Financial, I would travel up and down Pico Boulevard in Los
Angeles, knocking on doors of merchants and offering to collect their bad
checks. Eventually, we were retained by
several major corporations to provide nationwide collection services. 

Today
Cedar Financial is one of the largest collection agencies in the nation,
celebrating 30 years of successful representation for creditors across the
globe.
 We are incredibly proud of our
track record of empowering immigrants and first-generation Americans, both as
clients and co-workers.
 Cedar Financial
understands first-hand the depth of hard work and responsibility necessary for
success as a first-generation citizen of the United States, and we welcome
those individuals who have successfully made the legal immigration journey as
clients, friends, and co-workers.
    

National Immigrants Day: Two Immigration Stories From the ARM Industry
http://www.insidearm.com/news/00047795-national-immigrants-day-two-immigration-s/
http://www.insidearm.com/news/rss/
News

All the latest in collections news updates, analysis, and guidance

Speak Your Mind

*