The Annual Migrant Journey Service Learning Project
"Migrant Journey" is a new initiative that represents collaboration between the Catholic Migrant Farmworker Network, Creighton University Latino Student Association and the Office of Multicultural Affairs. The "Migrant Journey" trips expose students to the reality of today's migrant farmworker. Issues of justice, family, spirituality, immigration, and the reality that faces the poor are just some of the topics students learn and have dialogue about during these trips which occur over Creighton's Spring Break.

History...
2006 Jesuit Hispanic Ministry Conference
2007 Catholic Migrant Farmworker Network, II National Consultation- Creighton University, Omaha NE
2008 Migrant Journey Service Learning: Stockton, California
2009 Migrant Journey Service Learning: Ohio
2010 Migrant Journey Service Learning : Stockton/Fresno, California
2011 Migrant Journey service Learning: Colorado
2012 Migrant Journey Service Learning: North Carolina
Podcast on Migrant Shepherds
Ricardo Ariza, director of Creighton's Office of Multicultural Affairs discusses a recent trip he took with students to meet these shepherds- Click here to hear the podcast and please sign our petition below...
Migrant Journey Service Learning Petition for Sheepherders of Colorado!
The Pilgrim Church, a photo of the mountain in where Sheepherders in Colorado live and worship...
Creighton University students and staff from the Office of Multicultural Affairs have set up an online petition to gather support against gross violation of human rights of Sheepherders in Colorado.
Creighton University Office of Multicultural Affairs in partnership with several national and local community based organizations such as the Catholic Migrant Farmworker Network, Hispanic Affairs Project, Legal Aid of Nebraska and Colorado, Child and Migrant Services, Valley-Wide Health Systems, Inc. and others collaborated to educate 11 student volunteers about the reality of sheepherder industry, health issues of migrant field workers and the human rights abuses suffered by workers from Chile, Bolivia, Peru and Mexico.
U.S. Government/Sheepherder Industry policies and practices openly promote inhumane treatment on the western slope of Colorado. A special teach-in and dialogue with Spanish Professor Tom Acker, Mesa State University, Ignacio Alvarado, Chilean Sheepherder and Ricardo Perez, Hispanic Affairs Project provided incredible insight into a system of exploitation, abusive threats by employers, both living and working conditions that restrict the rights of the workers beyond the point that their human dignity is compromised.
During the Migrant Journey Service Learning trip, students were guided into the high country of Colorado and they were able to have contact with eight sheepherders living in "campitos". Workers shared stories of incredible maltreatment to include: working 365 days straight with no days off, monthly pay of $650.00, poor access to nutritious foods, limited supply of water, no refrigeration to store food, no bathing accommodations, no toilet, threats from employers that they would lose their contract if they talked to people about their plight, and the special H2A work permit for sheepherders that exempts the workers from minimal protections established by the U.S. Government.
According to Ricardo Ariza, Director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs a meeting was scheduled with Bishop Fernando Isern, Diocese of Pueblo Colorado, we shared our experience with the Nebraska Migrant Action Coalition and we are planning several actions to gain wide spread support of the rights of sheepherders in the United States. The national petition will be submitted to the 28 Jesuit Colleges and Universities nation-wide, the Catholic Migrant Farmworker Network and other concerned organizations and individuals. We respectfully request that all forms of social networking be utilized, that our political leaders, our faith community and stakeholders in sheepherder industry be contacted and asked to end this practice of slavery, human trafficking and total disregard for their human dignity. We are one family and we belong to one another!
Click here to sign our petition.
For further documentation, please click on the report provided by Professor Tom Acker, Spanish Department at Mesa State University Overworked AND Underpaid: H-2A Herders in Colorado: A Report by the Migrant Farm Worker Division of Colorado Legal Services, January 2010.
February 2011 - Video documentary, please CTRL + click www.krextv.com/news/around-the-region/Migrant-Sheep-Herders-Struggle-in-Harsh-Conditions-115532334.html
If you have questions or concerns, please contact Ricardo Ariza at ariza@creighton.edu