Gracias por la Vida
Wed, Jan 15
On the Job
It’s the first day and we got right to work. Jack took us
across the border to the Migrant Resource Center and we immediately did two
accompaniments. First, we escorted one young man from the tent on the border
wall to our center, and then a young man and his little girl (under two years
old). The walk doesn’t take even five minutes, but the streets are dangerous
for these migrants. Likely to be hanging around are men who are prone to kidnap
a migrant for the sake of getting a ransom from his or her family. Of course,
the danger is even greater for women who are at risk of also being raped. We
hope to make migrants safer with our presence.
On the walks today, I found myself being very alert,
checking out the men on the streets, trying to assess how trustworthy they
were. Jack says we should probably just be suspicious of everyone. It’s an
uncomfortable feeling. We’re like a little team of nonviolent bodyguards on
guard against a kidnap attempt. Jack says the kidnappers are unhappy with us (the
accompaniers) because we are basically preventing them from making money. Which
means that we are also in a risky position.
But that’s what accompaniment means. Putting our white
privileged selves out there as a shield for others and risking possible harm to
ourselves. CPT is quite cautious as it goes about this task. No one ever
accompanies alone. We walk with clear identifiers – rose colored vests. And we
keep the fence around the migrant center locked at all times. We keep to our
simple job of walking people to and from the tents to the center and don’t try
to do other things. If people want medical care or other kinds of help, we
refer them to CAME (Centro de Atención al Migrante Exodus). We just do our one
thing.
This evening we had dinner together at Jack and Linda’s.
This will be the norm – it takes the place of the daily CPT debriefing and
builds the community. There are six of us here right now. We all talked about
our day and about the situation here in Douglas/Agua Prieta. And it felt warm
and like family. It was a nice way to end the first day on the job.
Thurs, Jan 16
Thankfulness Shining
Through
One of the young men in the tent by the port of entry is
here in Agua Prieta with his mother, wife, and little 2-year old girl. The
family is staying elsewhere, not in the tent with him. But they joined him last
night in order to be together today because it is the little one’s second
birthday. We walked them all over this morning to the Migrant Resource Center,
through a dim, drizzly day.
Even though Melody and I didn’t have much of an exchange
with them because we can’t speak the language, I was still happy to be with
them. The little girl ran straight to the corner with the toys and proceeded to
drag a bunch of them off the shelves onto the floor and busy herself. The abuela sat down at the table almost
right away to take her weight off her aching knees. Mom and dad talked quitely,
checked their phones, took showers, and puttered around the center a little.
Dad emptied and cleaned out the jar they’ve been urinating in while at the
camp.
After a while, a group of local volunteers brought a hot
lunch for the family – beans, rice, and pork. They invited us to stay to join
them and we sat at the table and had a great mid-day meal. Before the meal, we
went around saying prayers and reflections of gratitude. It took a while, even
though we were few. I said I was grateful to be able to be here now and to be
graced to accompany them on their important journey. I’m not sure what everyone
else said in español, but I could
tell there was a lot they felt thankful for.
Abuela had made a
beautiful little birthday cake, covered in m&m’s, for her sweet two-year
old. But they didn’t have the birthday party at lunch. They were waiting for
the evening meal. I kept imagining myself in their shoes: a family celebrating its
baby’s birthday while they are all in such dire circumstances, running for
their lives. A joyful light in the darkness.
We walked them back to the tent and each of them in turn
gave us a warm hug of gratitude. Thankfulness shining through.
Sat, Jan 18
Life Goes by Fast
This morning, I saw a meme on Facebook that said: “The most
important gifts you can give are your love, time, and attention. Slow down,
take time to smile and enjoy loved ones… life goes by way too fast.” It occurs
to me that this is what we are doing with our accompaniment here. And I’m
finding that we can do this even when we can hardly speak to people (because of
the language difference). How fortunate I feel.
We are working within a system that has been set up by churches
and faith-based volunteers in Agua Prieta that has evolved over a couple of
decades to assist migrants. Recently, it has had to adapt and expand in response
to the recent US policy of “metering,"
where the US customs only allows a limited number of people to come in each day
at the port of entry to apply for asylum. We know what happens to those who try
to come in by crossing the border otherwise – they are detained and
incarcerated. At some other ports of entry, especially larger ones such as
Juarez or Tijuana, this metering has created huge and dangerous refugee camps
on the Mexican side and desperate people risking death by going outside of the
fortified cities to take their chances going through the desert. Those in the
camps often fall prey to criminal kidnapping, trafficking, and rape; those
trying the desert die in large numbers. The brutal policy of funneling people
into the desert is called “Prevention Through Deterrence.”
In Agua Prieta, the system, honored by US Customs, works
fairly well to keep people safe. The Centro
de Atención al Migrante Exodus (CAME), established 19 years ago by the Parochia Sagrada Familia Catholic
parish, is the initial contact point and shelter for arriving migrants. There
people get their names on a list so that they move through the metering process
in an orderly way. CAME can shelter up to 44 people; others find another place
to stay before there is room for them at CAME. By order of arrival, people move
up the list to the point of moving to the tent just outside the port of entry.
From there, US Customs takes them in, one person or family at a time, according
to its own unknown schedule. From the tents, it can take a day or a week to be
called over to the “other side.” The Centro
de Recursos para Migrantes (CRM, aka Migrant Resource Center) plays the
support role for those who are moved to the tent.
Our role is with the CRM, working with local volunteers.
Here’s how it works. There are 3 shifts where we bring people from the tent to
CRM: 7 - 9 am, 11 am – 2 pm, 4 – 6 pm. Our routine is pretty much the same each
shift: we put on identifying rose-colored vests that say Apoyo a Migrantes on the back; we go to the tent, then walk whoever
is there through the streets to the center, one of us in front and one of us in
back (and one on the side if we have three of us); we hang out at the center, where
the migrants rest, talk, have coffee, food, showers, toilets, and minor medical
attention, and watch their kids play with some toys. Here, they can also
replenish certain things as needed (water, blankets, clothes). Then we walk
them back to the tent. Normally, there is always one person who stays at the
tent to mind their belongings and respond the the US customs agents if someone
is called to “cross over” for their asylum hearing.
Each day here is another opportunity to be present with brothers
and sisters making this incredible journey. I find myself wondering how I would
be handling the experience if the shoe were on the other foot – i.e., if I were
the one escaping murderous conditions in my own country to migrate to a foreign
country where I couldn’t speak the language and didn’t know how I would get by
if I were ever allowed to be there. It’s scary, and I am struck with a profound
respect and admiration for the people who are having to go through this. It’s
an honor and privilege to able to
accompany them on this small leg of their trip, as life goes by fast.
Thanks to you and Melody. Please take care and be safe.
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