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Orlando, Full of Grace

By Alexandra Starr, Christian Science Monitor. Posted April 4, 2006.


At the busy New York office of one especially generous man, immigrants receive help, comfort and advice.

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It's a frigid winter morning, but the fan installed on the wall of Orlando Tobon's minuscule office in Jackson Heights, Queens, is going full blast. Without the ventilation the one-room travel agency and tax preparation operation would no doubt be unbearably stuffy, given the number of Latino immigrants who squeeze into its confines. The three worn chairs reserved for visitors are constantly occupied.

Despite the long lines, the atmosphere is upbeat, even buoyant. In a country often perplexing and hostile to immigrants, Mr. Tobon has developed a reputation as a benign version of the mafia don in "The Godfather:" He seems capable of fixing almost any problem.

Officially, Tobon is an accountant and travel agent. But the requests his visitors bring often stray far from taxes and tickets. This particular morning, he calmly listens from behind a desk piled high with papers as a young Colombian woman and her boyfriend ask how she can initiate a divorce from her husband back home. Tobon gives them the card of a Spanish-speaking attorney and tells them to mention his name. Another Colombian native presents Tobon with a jury summons he's unable to decipher. Tobon fills it out and tells the man -- who is undocumented -- that even though he's received the form in error, he must sign it and mail it in. And no, he reassures the man, it won't lead to deportation.

Given that it's rare to hear a word of English spoken in this Latino neighborhood, the appearance of a gringo outside Tobon's office a few years back must have raised eyebrows. Film director Josh Marston sought out Tobon when he was researching his 2004 film "Maria Full of Grace," which chronicles the experience of a Colombian drug mule coming to the US. Tobon's quasi-official standing as the "Mayor of Little Colombia" would naturally have attracted a director eager to provide a realistic portrait of immigrant life in the US. Still, it was Tobon's knowledge of the darker, grittier part of the immigrant experience that brought Mr. Marston. In the past 25 years, Tobon has helped repatriate the corpses of more than 400 Latin Americans who died smuggling packets of cocaine or heroin in their digestive systems.

After observing Tobon at work, Marston rewrote his script and cast Tobon as Don Fernando, the kindly gentleman who helps Maria send the corpse of a fellow drug carrier back to Colombia. With the movie, the lines at Tobon's door grew even longer.

But Tobon doesn't begrudge the demand. He genuinely relishes the opportunity to come to people's aid. "It fills you up," he says in Spanish. "When someone comes into my office depressed, and leaves with hope, it makes me feel good."

Tobon is religious -- he attends Catholic mass every Sunday -- but he traces his impulse to help people to his mother, who raised him as a single parent. "She was tenacious, a real fighter," Tobon says. "And she devoted her life to helping people. Once she gave away one of my Christmas presents, a toy truck, to a poor little boy. She told me he needed it more than I did."

With a smile, he admits that the concept that generosity could be its own reward held little appeal to him as a toddler. But it was his mantra by the time he arrived in New York in 1968.

As Tobon worked menial jobs while earning an accounting degree at night, he developed a reputation for always being willing to help. When a neighbor had to go to the morgue to recover the body of a sister who'd died in a car crash, she turned to Tobon for support. It turned out to be Tobon's introduction to the plight of drug mules. At the morgue, he learned of three unclaimed female corpses; they were drug mules who'd died when cocaine pellets they'd ingested broke. Drug carriers frequently travel under false identities, and even when family members suspect a mule's fate, they may not come forward, given the potential legal consequences.


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View:
Felonious good works
Posted by: rinthy on Apr 4, 2006 8:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the United States congress had had it's way, not only Orlando, but those to whom he offers such unstinting help, would be felons marked for prison time. Ain't America great?
Rinthy

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Next Article On Assistance to Unemployed US Citizens
Posted by: fairleft on Apr 4, 2006 11:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Perhaps to young high school grads, contemplating staying at the minimum wage 'McDonalds job, or joining the military as basically their only options.

I'm sure there are scores of groups offering young US citizens assistance, but probably not any viable pathways these days to good-paying jobs.

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Heres Is An American Hero
Posted by: davidt on Apr 4, 2006 10:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mr. Tulon will probably someday receive some kind of recognition for his compassion, diligence & abilities to get things done.

Why? Because he practices the old art of Self-Sacrifice. You have all heard the homilies--It is better to give than receive, When you do something for someone else it makes you feel good.

Well, I look at thiese politicians who are currently "tackling" our immigration problem.

We DO NOT have an immigration problem. Just like we didn't have a transparency problem during the corporate scandals--we have to ENFORCE the laws that currently exist, not INVENT new ones just to crow about at the next-fundraiser " look what I did for YOU this year, if you want to see more write me a check you dipshits!"

That is a campaign speech I would like to hear because it is the most honest moment that a politician could have, given the current climate of re-election strategy.

In my heart I think that this country is going to turn around and there will be MORE Tulon's who have a strong sense of duty to fellow human beings instilled in them by their family, teachers, or one the "village" who reared them.

Who comes to mind is the current Nobel Prize winner from Africa. She gave a speech in front of a crowd on C-SPAN a while ago then she entertained questions. What questions?

Mostly they were concerned about "what can we do to take care of our environment?" I am sorry that I will mangle her name. Miss Wangele very graciously summed up her answer with "do what you can".

It is unfortunate that many in America, all supposed EXPERTS in their field whereupon they hear the truth related by someone from a foreign land , although Miss Wangele was educated in America, they see THEM as the EXPERT and their years of experience, education, reading, studying have left them without a clue about a problem that is most likely rubbing up against their butts on a daily basis! This is called the "paralysis of analysis" and there is plenty of it going on in these here United States.

Sooner or later they will listen to the little voice inside and get out there and do what they can, WITHOUT being told.

That is how EVERY nation in this world began. Things ain't changed a whole lot!

David T. Gray
Claremont, NH

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