Susanna, Leonardo,Tito, Sylvia

Let me share their stories
with you.
We met Susanna at Nazareth House, a shelter for women with no where else to go once they are deported. Susanna spoke English without even an accent since she
moved to Phoenix when she was eight yearsold. At 29 years of age now, Susanna is
fighting her deportation case with a lawyer in hopes that she can get back to her four
children, ages 13, 11, 6, and 1. Susanna didn’t apply for DACA status because she
had been afraid, but in hindsight she wishes she had.
She was picked up while driving her kids home for a traffic violation and that was the last
time she saw her children. Susanna's 21 years of living in the United States and the
knowledge that her four children would lose their mother didn't stop her deportation.
She was stopped on February 4th and we met her on March 2nd. Susanna also leaves
her husband and job as a dishwasher behind.
The eight women we met at the shelter spanned the ages of 21 to 61. Their stories were
varied and their eyes were full of pain. Without Nazareth house, these women would be
on the street and prey to cartel members who want to traffic women and/or drugs.
Minneapolis delegation members at El Comedor. He told me to call him Leo (like DiCaprio). Leo was a framer for a construction company in Mesa, Arizona. We spoke in English since
he had been in the United States for 15 years. He shared his story of getting pulled over for having a tail light out and realizing that he had forgotten his billfold that day as well. In an
instant, he was put in jail and deported within days. He leaves behind three children and one on the way. Leo told me that he doesn’t have any money to pay the coyotes to cross back
across the border, so he will have to find his Mexican family in a city he hasn’t seen in 15
years.
Leo told me his story with tears in his eyes and then thanked me for listening and for being
at El Comedor in solidarity with him. As our group exited El Comedor to walk back across
the border to the U.S. side, Leo was talking to his kids on the phone in English and
crying, “Put mommy on the phone sweetie. I know, just go get mommy.”
Tito is one of the directors of HEPAC*. He shared the mission and vision of this house of hope and peace and how his dream is for a better education for all children.
Tito told us about the history of Nogales before it was divided
first by a fence, then by a wall, and then by a bigger wall.
A city that was once full of neighbors, mainly sustaining themselves on farmland and agriculture, was divided.
Tito remembers playing volleyball with kids on the U.S. side of
the fence when he was little. The fence served as the net.
Tito told us about the 97 factories that took up residence in Nogales
after NAFTA and took up fertile lands, changed the environment, and exploited workers.
In Nogales, running water has restrictions for homes.
Sometimes it may only be available for a couple hours a day. While
the factories face no restrictions and even have paved streets,
constant electricity, and internet. Much of Nogales neighborhoods
still do not have paved streets and owning a computer or having
access to the internet is a rarity.
Tito stated plainly, “The humanity workers and the people of Nogales is not considered.
TV’s, cellphones, and other THINGS can be brought back and forth across the border, but
not people/employees.
Most factories pay their workers about 80 pesos per day. This is almost $5/day.
More uncommon are the factories that are super proud of their wages because workers
receive $8/day.
What we often don’t realize is that regular items at the store have a cost very close to
what the cost is in the United States. Toothbrushes, toothpaste, deodorant, feminine
supplies, school supplies, etc can be completely out of reach for a large portion of the
population.
Tito also talked about the working conditions as he has toured factories where workers
are in constant contact with chemicals without protection and no ear protection when
working within very loud machines. And if someone gets sick, their medical insurance
and support is cut off.
“I usually call this modern slavery,” Tito said.
And finally, let me tell you about Sylvia. I don't know much about her. I only know that from the moment Sister Alicia began speaking to the new group of deportees at the Comedor, she was in tears. She folded her hands tightly in prayer as her tears grew bigger and fell faster. Sylvia sat in a small cluster of three young women at the table closest to the tiny kitchen. Once her tears started falling, they never stopped. I knew her pain was too fresh to engage in conversation so instead I can only wonder. I wonder if she was a victim of the border patrol's practice of scattering or family separation. I wonder if she has been hurt or violated. I wonder if she will end up at Nazareth House.
Immigrants who cross the border have to walk several days through the Sonoran desert where depending on the time of year, temperatures can drop below freezing (at night) or soar well above 100 degrees during the day. The Border Patrol has many sophisticated sensors and tracking devices to track these undocumented immigrants, but the tactic of scattering (also called chase and scatter) means they purposely bring helicopters close enough to small groups of people in the desert so that they run in terror and get separated. This means people are alone in the desert and are more likely to get lost or even die. This also means that family members are often separated and belongings can be left behind. Another way to scatter is with horses so that the border control will force many to flee into the unknown desert while managing to capture some.
Family separation is also a purposeful tactic. This means that if family members are deported from the same court, they will purposely be brought to different cities in Mexico when released to deter them from crossing again. This leads to more emotional trauma, fear, and additional drain on financial resources to cross more miles before reconnecting. Additionally, if an undocumented immigrant is picked up near El Paso, Texas they may be released in Nogales, Mexico so that it is harder for them to find their original crossing and/or coyote. These are complicated methods that are difficult for me to describe, but the purpose is to separate family and deter immigration through emotionally and physically harmful practices. Is this really who we are?
I wonder what made Sylvia cross the desert border in the first place. Certainly her story must involve family in that she is either hoping to reunite in the United States or find work to support her family in Mexico. I do not know if Sylvia will try to cross the border again. If her desperation overtakes her fear, she may.
The stories of Susanna, Leo, Tito, and Sylvia are just a handful of the stories being told daily in places like Nogales, Mexico. These are real people. If you haven't met anyone who was recently deported or who has risked everything to cross the border from Mexico, perhaps these stories will help make these people a little more real.
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| HEPAC Community Garden |
*HEPAC welcomes volunteers for the day or to stay on-sight to assist with everything from their garden to educating children and adults.