https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2021-03-28/column-one-things-migrants-carried-and-dropped-as-they-crossed-the-border
Source: https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2021-03-28/column-one-things-migrants-carried-and-dropped-as-they-crossed-the-border
MARCH 28, 2021
5 AM PT
ROMA, Texas —
A toddler’s muddy shoe.
An empty wallet.
A pink hairbrush.
A line of Scripture.
These and other possessions litter the dirt path leading uphill from the Rio Grande. Bright spots quickly coated with dust, they are what was carried and what was dropped by mothers, fathers and children, like the boy whose size 6 Batman underwear lay in a clearing beyond a thicket.
Birth certificates. Scribbled phone numbers. Prized belongings hauled for weeks over hundreds of miles. These, too, are scattered along the trail by migrants, their footsteps quiet in the night after they’ve crossed the river. But what shine most are the plastic wristbands — a rainbow of yellow, gray, red and blue spreading through the brush — some cinched to fit the smallest arms.
Many are printed with a single word: entregas. Deliveries.
A smuggler’s code.
Mexican traffickers have been ferrying families and unaccompanied children, many from Central America, across the river on rafts and into Texas’ Rio Grande Valley this month. They affix the wristbands to migrants as proof of payment. The wristbands are migrants’ claves — their keys to safe passage — and those without them say they’ve been kidnapped by smugglers and held until relatives or friends agreed to pay their fee, at least $6,000.
The wristbands dangle from the brush like strange ornaments. Some who wore them would be sent back to Mexico. Others would die trying to find home in a new land.
State troopers who patrol the area with night vision goggles say a smuggler recently dropped a 2-year-old in the river to divert the troopers from seizing a raft. Earlier this month, a pregnant woman went into labor on the riverbank and lost her baby. More recently, about 200 miles upriver from Roma, a 9-year-old girl died while crossing the river with her Guatemalan mother and young brother.
When migrants near shore, troopers yank at their inflatable rafts, puncturing some and setting them aside like trophies. The migrants shed what they own as they hustle up the path from the river
toward U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents in a hilltop parking lot.From there, the migrants are taken to an overcrowded holding area, where more than 4,200 people are squeezed into a space designed for 250. Many are crossing this month for the first time; they aren’t worried about what they might need if they’re sent back to Mexico.
“I’m going to help him until the day I die.”
LILIANA DE JESUS GALDAMEZ MORALES, MOTHER OF ERICK DAVID LANDAVERDE GALDAMEZ, 15
Martha Ramirez Amaya has come north from Honduras after losing her home in Hurricane Eta. Smugglers force her and her 5-year-old son, Elvin, out of the raft. She tumbles into the shallows, soaking her black coat and jeans. When she makes it to shore, Ramirez, 20, feels for the gold medallion she wears around her neck for protection. It’s there. She hurries toward the Border Patrol flashlights on the hill.
Ramirez and others follow the trail as it splits and winds through the brush, their possessions often falling onto land owned by Jorge Barrera’s family. Barrera, who fishes from the riverbank at dusk, has called Border Patrol to complain about bags of Cheetos, powdered baby formula and other trash. But it continues to accumulate as migrants push on despite the pandemic, smugglers’ threats and the needle-sharp crown of thorn bushes.
The migrants begin to shed all but their most prized possessions once they reach shore. Jonatan Cruz, 31, and his Guatemalan family drop their expired Mexican residency permits. Others have left sweatshirts, size 23 toddler shoes, Avon strawberry lip balm, disposable diapers, masks, Garanimals khakis (size 2T), a red Hello Kitty purse and a Texas flag backpack. When their wet jackets snag on trees, they slip them off and leave them suspended in the dark, like ghosts.
They stumble forward without flashlights into the scrubby oak and sage. They clutch what they need most: valid identification and scraps of paper bearing the phone numbers of friends and family in the U.S. Youths traveling alone keep contact numbers tucked in their pockets, if not written on their chests by their parents before leaving home.
Bessy Yamileth Gómez Flores carries a notebook scribbled with Matthew 21:22: “If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.” Another woman drops a pink pleather purse stuffed with a wad of wilted Honduran bills.
Others carry their hopes. Salvadoran Fatima Pineda Vasquez, 16, wants to be an architect. She has come with her 12-year-old nephew, who wants to be a surgeon. They plan to join his mother, Fatima’s older sister, in Missouri.
Many bring pruebas, or proof, of the threats and violence they’re fleeing in Central America. They hope to present them as evidence to request asylum. They also carry Central American birth certificates, precious to migrant parents anxious about being separated from their children by U.S. authorities, and to youths traveling without adults. Those who can show they’re under 18 are released to friends and family in the U.S. and can pursue their immigration claims. Those who can’t prove their age face potential expulsion to Mexico.
As migrants pick their way uphill, vital paperwork is lost, including two birth certificates tucked inside a black diaper bag discarded along the trail. They belong to Honduran migrant Maryi Jennifer Amaya Mejia, 22, and her 2-year-old daughter, Jenice Paola. Across the top of one of the papers, someone has printed a Connecticut phone number.
Amaya’s mother, Lidia Mejia, answers the call. She crossed into the U.S. six years ago after her two sons were slain. When the men who killed them threatened the family again this year, she says, she sent for her daughter and granddaughter. Amaya and Jenice arrived in Waterbury, Conn., a week ago, she says.
She passes the phone to Amaya, who says she is happy to have crossed the river safely. She had forgotten to retrieve her documents when she left the diaper bag behind. As her toddler babbles in the background, Amaya asks to have the certificates mailed to her new address, the one she scrawled across the copies before leaving Honduras.
Another crumpled scrap of paper adrift in the brush near the river has “Papi” and “Mari” scrawled in pen next to northern Virginia phone numbers. The first one doesn’t work. But Mari Vicente answers the second.
Vicente, 30, a homemaker from Guatemala living in the U.S. legally, says she isn’t sure who carried her number across the border.
“I can’t tell you because I don’t have family coming here,” she says.
Vicente has a friend in Guatemala, a 24-year-old woman with a 7-year-old son, who talked about migrating to the U.S. recently after she was threatened by gangs. But Vicente is sure her friend is still in Guatemala.
“She heard parents with children could come,” says Vicente. “So she may come for the opportunity.”
Lodged at the foot of a mesquite tree near the river, wrapped in a small plastic bag, is a neatly folded copy of the Salvadoran birth certificate for 15-year-old Erick David Landaverde Galdamez. Inside, someone tucked a small rectangle of notepaper with handwritten phone numbers and email addresses, including the number for his mother in Ohio.
Border Patrol agents called the number late at night last weekend to ask: “Are you the mother of Erick?”
Liliana de Jesus Galdamez Morales, who crossed the border illegally years ago, says yes.
Agents say her son is in custody, ask for her address and say to expect another call. They don’t say when.
The Border Patrol doesn’t usually allow youths to make phone calls. Agents confiscate their belts and shoelaces and issue them wristband IDs. But the agency is required by law to transfer youths within 72 hours to federal shelters. Once there, the young migrants are supposed to be allowed to call their parents. But Erick — who goes by his middle name, David — hasn’t called.
On Wednesday, Galdamez calls a federal hotline. A woman tells her David is at a federal shelter. She must wait for a government social worker to call this weekend.
A few days before he crossed the river over a week ago, David sent his mother a message on Facebook telling her not to worry. But Galdamez, 39, has been having headaches ever since her eldest son received threats from a gang in El Salvador and fled March 4.
He’s a shy boy, she says — good at math, a homebody who lived with his grandmother and 8-year-old sister in Nueva Concepción. He helps around the house after school and hopes to study business administration or maybe become a doctor, his mother says.
Galdamez left for the U.S. with her husband when David was 2. They built a new life with three younger children. She’s a homemaker; her husband paints houses. One night this week, after he came home from work, she caught him crying in his room, desperate to see their son. They paid $4,000 to smuggle David north. They have a room waiting for him, and she has made him pupusas.
“I’m going to help him until the day I die,” she says by phone from her home in Columbus, where she is awaiting the social worker’s call about when and how she might claim her son.
Galdamez asks to have the dusty copy of her son’s birth certificate mailed to her. She hopes it might help him stay in the U.S. legally.
“He has his pruebas,” she says. “I’m not here legally, but I’ve never done anything against this country.”
Before leaving the riverside, migrants receive plastic property bags labeled “Homeland Security” and government “baggage check” tags for their belongings. The night wind snatches a few, strewing them across the bushes, including one belonging to 9-year-old Jacsi Carranza Novoa of Honduras, whose tag says she arrived alone.
Some of the property bags accompany youths like Jacsi to federal shelters. Others are returned to migrant families being released to a local church, where they receive donated food, clothes and prayer cards that read: “I do not see the road ahead of me. I cannot know for certain where it will end.”
Not everyone makes it to the church. The bags belonging to migrants expelled to Mexico blow in drifts on border bridges.
At the foot of the bridge in Reynosa, Mexico, migrant families, many still wearing Border Patrol-issued wristbands, open their bags only to discover that they have lost more than a chance at a new life.
“We don’t have phones or anything to communicate with people. What can we do?” says Norma Najera Perez, 23, holding out her empty hands to her daughter, Sandy Ortega Najera. The 7-year-old wears a wristband that reads “Property: None.”
“We dropped everything at the river,” says Cesar Garcia, 50, a Guatemalan machine operator who crossed the Rio Grande with his three sons, ages 8, 10 and 12, hoping to join his wife in Los Angeles.
Reynosa is a cartel hub where Central American migrants are easy prey. Those who stay near the bridge risk assault, kidnapping and extortion. But so do those who try to leave by taxi. Few can even afford the fare.
“Where are we supposed to go without money?” asks Najera. “I’m scared to spend the night here.”
“Many don’t have homes to go back to,” says a 17-year-old Guatemalan, Yan Alfaro.
Scores of migrants camp together in a nearby park. They spread their few belongings across the concrete floor of a gazebo. They ponder what to do next.
And they long for the Mexican cellphones, snacks and pesos they dropped in haste in the dust of the opposite riverbank, in the land that wouldn’t take them.
Carolyn Cole is a staff photographer for the Los Angeles Times. Her coverage of the civil crisis in Liberia won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for feature photography. Cole has been named U.S. newspaper photographer of the year three times. Cole grew up in California and Virginia, before attending the University of Texas, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism. She went on to earn a master of art’s degree from Ohio University.
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This exemplifies how children are also crossing the border and risking there lives for a better life.
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i totally agree becuase migrants are known as aliens juts coming and suposely talking over people jobs but it isnt like that.
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Imagine how hard and traumatizing it must be for the children
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I wonder how much losing these items impacts immigrants, if they manage to successfully cross. Especially the phone numbers since that was probably there main resource for help or getting ahold of there family.
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this tells us the things they would carry with them
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i dont know what these are?
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This picture illustrates the everyday necessities that undocumented immigrants bring throughout there journey. Doesn’t seem like a lot of stuff wonder how valuable all of this is to them.
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This information is important because it shows what these people have to do in order to get in America,
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This is an example of something that they carried that is very important
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This paragraph shows the great lengths people are willing to go to be smuggled into america.
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This paragraph stresses to me how privileged those that are born in the US are and how much people will work to obtain that privilege not granted to them at birth.
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The photo shows that any age try’s to cross the border
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This image shows how difficult the trip is to especially for young children.
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This shows an old man who is getting help from a very young boy in order to cross the river. This shows that people of many ages are involved in this.
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Why is it that migrants head towards the holding facility and not away.
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This image stands out to me because it captures the difficulty and emotional strain on migrants.
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The fear and hope in this image are undeniable. From the expressions on the people’s faces to the way they are grasping each other’s hands.
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It makes me think about how so many immigrants are forced into coming here. It’s not really a choice. They are forced by war, gangs, poverty. They carry only memories and hopes.
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This image shows how difficult and meaningful it is to make the treacherous journey.
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This image is important because it shows that many immigrants will sacrifice their family and loved ones in order to have a better life in another country.
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I chose this image since it shows the emotional pain they are in. All of them are praying that there trip is a success. Can’t imagen the emotions they might be feeling.
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The items that they have lost seem so important. What will they do now that they don’t have their birth certificates Or their family’s contact information. Scary.
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The things they let go of are often items of the capatilistic marketing of power countries, for example Hello Kitty purse, Avon strawberry lip balm. All stuff that we are made to think to need and can’t live without
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This shows how these migrants are willing to risk everything to find a new life. There won’t be much waiting for them if they are turned back.
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This paragraph shows how much these people value and put faith in the idea of america being a great country. They only care about their identification so long as they are able to get across the border safely.
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My dad came from Brazil with his family when he was 16. He crossed the border in the same way. The family started with luggage but it was stolen. All they had was an address and phone number of a friend in Richmond.
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well i see a kids jacket and they probobly droped it on accient and they might it later on due to the cold
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This image shows things left behind in the rush to keep moving.
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I thought this was pretty significant because it illustrates how for the vast majority of immigrants coming to America represents a beacon of hope for them.
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Examples of things people carry that aren’t necessarily physical.
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shows us that they are afraid of being separated from there loved ones
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The proof of fleeing violence is crucial to be able to apply for asylum.
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In what ways do these proofs help them?
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My dad and my grandfather were separated from my aunt and my grandmother. Then they took my uncle, who was only a baby, away for two weeks. Now he has mental illness.
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They all look drained, tired, and cold. Sad to see them at this state especially the fact that these kids have to endure so much hardship.
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Even if they make it to the US with their belongings, migrants are only allowed to keep few possessions, out of the few things they already have coming into the country.
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As if crossing the boarder isn’t hard enough already they are also limited on the things that they can bring over
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This is important because it shows that after they make it to the U.S., they have to basically get rid of everything they had. They will only be able to keep a few things.
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It’s clear that there are lots of internal issues as well. Not just crossing over the border.
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The boats seem like a symbol of lives flattened out. There’s no air, no escape. Maybe the people who had been in these boats made it across and have found new lives, or maybe they are stuck in those horrible detention centers.
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this photo shows that they would use whatever they could to cross
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Who are the smugglers? They used to be called coyotes.
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This raises the mysterious question of who brought her number across and what ended up happening to them since they lost her number.
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This image shows that these immigrants are very tired. It also shows all of the things they have to go through in order to be able to enter the U.S.
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Why do migrants leave possessions like these behind?
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This is a really tough idea. People must think it’s unfair; the idea that they are illegal yet they didn’t really do anything wrong.
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My dad came here in 1997 but he wasn’t legal until 2015. At first he was going to try to do DACA because he was barely 16 when he crossed. But he had no pruebas of that time. All the paperwork was gone. He did nothing wrong but his family came here so he did too.
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Personally I thought this is a significant part of the text because I know many immigrants/ people that come here illegally can strongly resonate with this. I know people even family members who basically say the same thing. (although coming here is against the law many of them haven’t put this country in danger or committed crimes)
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This photo is interesting to me because you can see how much they are willing to go through just to get to the US, like crossing a wide river.
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Why don’t they all make it to the church?
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How many political officials are aware of this and what measures are they taking to prevent this from happening?
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General Document Comments 0
shows us that children also had to go thought a lot of difficulties.
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