PDA

View Full Version : Another Sad illegal immigrant story...




aGameOfThrones
02-07-2014, 05:01 PM
MIAMI (AP) — He remembers the moment so clearly, the last time he saw his mother on American soil.

Jose Antonio Machado was merely 15, too young and powerless to stop what was happening. His mother, Melba, was dressed in an orange jumpsuit, wrists in handcuffs, being led away by an immigration officer.

When she looked back, he mouthed: "I love you." She nodded and turned away.

Instead, Jose finds himself in the same situation as thousands of other young people in this country: He is the child of a parent who came to the U.S. illegally and then was deported — while he was left behind.

"Jose is an abandoned child," a child law advocate wrote in the court papers that led to his placement in a foster home back in 2011. At least 5,100 children whose parents are either in detention, or already deported, live in foster care today, according to one estimate.

But if Jose felt abandoned, it wasn't by his mother but rather the laws of his adoptive country for sending her away.

For the past three years, he has been on a mission: To bring his mother back. His work has taken him to Congress, gotten him meetings with the likes of Donald Trump and Mark Zuckerberg, landed him on television. Along the way, he has grown into a steady force in the national immigration debate, a young but powerful voice for his family and the many others hoping to one day reunite.

___

She was, by almost any standard, not a perfect mother. But she was his.

When Melba Soza left Jose and his twin brother, Jose Manuel, in Nicaragua and came to the U.S., the boys were just 3. Three years later when they were reunited, Jose had no memory of her. For years he called her "Melba," not mom.

She had created a new life in Miami. She lived with a boyfriend and soon was pregnant with a daughter. Jose, who came to the U.S. on a visa along with his brother, remembers those early years as happy ones.

But then Soza's boyfriend began drinking, money got tight, and they moved into a rat-infested trailer. Soon, Soza and her boyfriend began abusing the children, according to court papers. Child services officials were called to intervene, and Soza was ordered to participate in anger management classes.

Eventually, she left her boyfriend, who would win custody of their daughter. She rented a one-bedroom apartment for her and the boys, and got a job as a gas station cashier. And, says Jose, "she asked for forgiveness" for her sins of the past. "And I did forgive her," he says.

Then came his mother's arrest in September 2010 after a traffic stop. She might have been briefly detained and let go, but she had an outstanding warrant stemming from an earlier fight with the ex-boyfriend. And she was in the country illegally.

Prosecutors didn't pursue the criminal charges, but some six months later, Jose's mother was deported.

With their father, a man they barely knew, back in Nicaragua, Jose and his brother at first lived with an aunt. Jose's brother eventually moved in with his girlfriend's family, but Jose moved around — staying with another aunt and then with a cousin in an apartment where he slept in a reclining chair covered in cigarette burns.

By then, Jose had missed a month of school and, at 17, could see his future slipping away. An immigration activist Jose had met shortly before his mother's arrest helped, getting his paperwork in order so that Jose could resume classes. The friend, Isabel Sousa-Rodriguez, also reached out to a lawyer when Jose decided to try foster care.

Sousa-Rodriguez also became the mentor Jose needed as he waded more deeply into the immigrant activist movement, his sights set on finding a way to get his mother back.

"I was so impressed by him," Sousa-Rodriguez says. "Being so young and so passionate about social justice. That's rare."
___

At his foster home, Jose didn't act angry or depressed, just determined.

His foster mother, Jolie Bogorad, remembers him writing speeches and debating how the immigration system should be reformed. He started going to activist meetings, sometimes waking at 4 a.m. to attend weekend gatherings.

"I would say ... 'You don't want to sleep? Chill out? Have fun?,'" Bogorad recalls. "He'd say, 'After.'"

Within a year, Jose was a policy analyst for a state immigration network. He showed up at protests, leading chants and sharing his story. Last year, then a senior in high school, he led a group of activists inside U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio's Miami office, refusing to leave until they were granted a meeting with an aide.

He followed that with a letter to the editor of The Miami Herald, asking politicians to stand by a proposed bipartisan immigration reform measure, which included a provision to allow some deported immigrants with relatives still in the U.S. to return.

"I want my mom to be able to come back to Florida," Jose wrote, "and celebrate my graduation with me."

Instead, from afar, Soza saw snapshots of her son on Facebook, in his white cap and gown.

She moved from Nicaragua to Spain, and found a job caring for the elderly. Through Facebook, she watched his transformation from boy into man and activist, through the many pictures of him staging protests and meeting politicians.

They communicated through text messages and weekly phone calls. Sometimes Jose posted photographs on Facebook of her juxtaposed next to him, separate but together in one picture frame. "Dear Universe," he wrote in a post in May. "This is the last Mother's Day without my mom."

More than 100,000 parents of U.S. citizen children have been deported since 1998, according to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Applied Research Center, a New York-based advocacy organization, has found that at least 5,100 U.S. citizen children in 22 states are living in foster care because a parent has been detained or deported. An unknown number of non-citizen children have also been left behind.

While advocates such as Jose see immigration reform as the answer, others oppose the idea of allowing deported relatives to return, except in rare cases.

"Immigration law has no meaning if we deported people and then turn around and let them back in," says Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates tighter immigration policies.

http://news.yahoo.com/young-activist-fights-bring-deported-mom-back-162727975.html

eduardo89
02-07-2014, 05:21 PM
Why wasn't he deported with her? Makes no sense, he's not a US citizen.

Valli6
02-08-2014, 11:55 AM
Why wasn't he deported with her? Makes no sense, he's not a US citizen.
Honestly - how do they keep missing this obvious point? Keep the kid with the parent!

aGameOfThrones
02-08-2014, 12:16 PM
Why wasn't he deported with her? Makes no sense, he's not a US citizen.

Stop trying to derail this thread. It's SAD!!!!!

eduardo89
02-08-2014, 12:36 PM
Stop trying to derail this thread. It's SAD!!!!!

How is commenting on the story derail the thread?

It certainly is a sad story, and I blame Obama and his unwillingness to uphold immigration law. The kid is an illegal immigrant and never should have been left in the country alone if his mother was deported. He should have been deported along with her to keep the family united. Had the kid been a US citizen, I'd say the opposite. I'd say that the mother should not have been deported until the child turned 18 or was self-sufficient. Overall, this just highlights the mess of the current immigration laws on the books.

LibertyEagle
02-08-2014, 12:38 PM
How is commenting on the story derail the thread?

It certainly is a sad story, and I blame Obama and his unwillingness to uphold immigration law. The kid is an illegal immigrant and never should have been left in the country alone if his mother was deported. He should have been deported along with her to keep the family united. Had the kid been a US citizen, I'd say the opposite. I'd say that the mother should not have been deported until the child turned 18 or was self-sufficient. Overall, this just highlights the mess of the current immigration laws on the books.

Exactly.

aGameOfThrones
02-08-2014, 12:39 PM
How is commenting on the story derail the thread?

It certainly is a sad story, and I blame Obama and his unwillingness to uphold immigration law. The kid is an illegal immigrant and never should have been left in the country alone if his mother was deported. He should have been deported along with her to keep the family united. Had the kid been a US citizen, I'd say the opposite. I'd say that the mother should not have been deported until the child turned 18 or was self-sufficient. Overall, this just highlights the mess of the current immigration laws on the books.


You made a good point that is interfering with the sadness.

aGameOfThrones
02-08-2014, 01:32 PM
I've been reading articles about this illegal immigrant who survived 13 months adrift in the Pacific and this is what Mexico is doing.



While Alvarenga is from El Salvador, he began his ill-fated shark fishing trip from Mexico, where he had lived for years.

Manila-based Mexican diplomat Christian Clay Mendez, who jetted in to help handle Alvarenga's repatriation, said he had been in Mexico illegally for 15 years, which is why he would go back to El Salvador.

But he said that if after his return to El Salvador, he "goes through the proper channels, I'm sure that our embassy people in El Salvador would be more than willing to assist in getting him to Mexico legally".

"We'd be willing to look into that," he added.


http://news.yahoo.com/castaway-likely-suffering-post-traumatic-stress-says-doctor-071340720.html

ObiRandKenobi
02-08-2014, 02:15 PM
LOL