Good News from the Resistance: Last week, Good News met up with Grannies Respond/Abuelas Responden in Texas. By the time we joined them, most of the Grannies had been on the road for a week, originating in New York, Oregon, Michigan, and points between. They’d stopped for rallies along the way, raising awareness about the collateral damage of the Trump Administration’s “zero-tolerance” immigration policy: separated families, detained and orphaned children. We met the Grannies in San Antonio, for the 4-hour drive to McAllen, the last leg of their journey.

Why McAllen? Hundreds of immigrants, many of them asylum-seeking families and children, are being detained there. We went to learn.

First, there was Bad News:

Shortly after our arrival, 100+ of us stood in a park in downtown McAllen, where we were greeted by Veteran Service Corp Director of Operations Pate Hutson. Pate had spent the previous two weeks traveling the Texas border and meeting with hundreds of people, to get a sense of what life is like for residents of the Rio Grande Valley. He told us:

“The fear is palpable here. This is real. What’s going on here is not what you hear about. There is a lot to learn. It’s about what you can take home and talk about with your neighbors. Listen. Because it matters.”

We learned that most of our current immigration policy is not new. What’s new is the aggressive nature of enforcement under the Trump administration, which has resulted in:

After our briefing, we set off on the Refugee Walk of Significance, tracing the steps taken by immigrants (mostly from Central America, but lately a significant uptick from Cuba) who are “caught and released” by Border Patrol.  

First stop: The infamous McAllen bus station, where Border Patrol releases the “lucky” ones – but not before fitting each with an ankle bracelet. With no money, food, or English, there is nonetheless a glimmer of Good News at the bus depot: Samaritans like Luis Guerrero, a former firefighter who volunteers from the station 24/7, and meets every bus.

 

As we approached the station, a bus full of “released” immigrants had just arrived, many carrying children. As they disembarked, we gave them a standing ovation, clapping and shouting “bienvenidos!” (Thankfully, our guide explained to them who we were – the last thing we wanted was to scare anyone. The smiles indicated we were understood).

Next stop: Catholic Charities Respite Center. Luis and other volunteers  direct the newcomers to the Center, a few blocks away. There, volunteers see that everyone gets a shower, a meal, and a bed for one night. They also receive a backpack filled with toiletries, snacks, and small toys for the children.

For many, this will be all that they have to sustain them through their bus ride out of McAllen — to anywhere in the U.S. where they know someone who has agreed to sponsor them. Who gets to leave the detention centers? Who is separated from their children? Who is sent back to their country of origin? It’s a mystery. 

There is one constant: Attorney General Jeff Sessions continues to raise the bar on who gets to stay; “credible fear” for asylum-seekers is harder to prove, and bail is being set at unattainable levels.

After walking by the bus depot, visiting the Respite Center, stuffing backpacks for “the released,”

visiting La Posada Shelter for asylum-seekers and the Wall (yes, a significant piece of it already exists) with a Telemundo reporter,

we ended our visit with a panel discussion led by front-line advocates. There, we learned that many are profiting off of the immigration crisis, which has become a revenue stream for private-sector prison companies. 

“Our tax dollars are paying private companies to put children in prison.”

A few Grannies tried, unsuccessfully, to visit the Ursula detention center in McAllen, a former warehouse that was modified to hold up to 1,000 children in cages made of chain-link fencing. It’s known as “the refrigerator,” because it is kept so cold.

Here’s as close as they could get:

 

There are more than 200 detention centers like it across the U.S.

The Good News? Resistance against the Trump Administration’s immigration crisis nightmare is strong and multi-faceted. Public outcry, the ACLU, and outraged judges have forced the Administration to halt some of its most barbaric actions. Immigration advocates on the ground are well-organized and know what needs to be done. It’s up to us, the Resisters, to help them, and to keep up the fight. Here’s why and how:

 Sign Up. Show Up. Never Give Up.

WE ACTIVIST GRANDMOTHERS

“Aging may have slowed me down, but it hasn’t shut me up,” said Claire Nelson, a member of Grannies Respond/Abuelas Responden, before embarking on a 2,000 mile bus trip to protest family separation at the U.S. border.

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WE WATCHING LUIS IN ACTION AT THE BUS STATION

Luis and a cadre of volunteers help “the released” find their way.

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WE ANGRY TIAS & ABUELAS

Anger got them started, love keeps them going.

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WE THE PASSION OF THESE YOUNG ACTIVISTS

They set up camp outside of a children’s detention center, and they’re not going home until the children do.

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WE WHEN CHURCHES DO WHAT THEY PREACH

The Catholic Church has become the life-line for immigrants who wind up in S. Texas.

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WE THESE SISTERS

Since 1989, the Sisters of Divine Providence have been sheltering asylum-seekers while their cases are adjudicated. Their shelter is a haven for the lucky few who wind up there.

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WE PRO BONO LAWYERS REUNITING FAMILIES

This group of lawyers is fighting 24/7 to reunite 381 parents with their children. They are in desperate need of pro bono legal support, in particular, immigration lawyers who speak Spanish.

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WE MOTHER AND CHILD REUNIONS

It happened for this Honduran mother and her 5-year old son.

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WE BETO O’ROURKE

A Spanish-speaking Congressman of Irish descent, who’s been likened to Bobby Kennedy, has a real chance of unseating GOP Senator Ted Cruz. He’s raised tens of millions of dollars – without taking PAC money.

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WE TAKING ACTION: HOW YOU CAN HELP IMMIGRANTS AT U.S. PORTS OF ENTRY

Neta is a fast-growing Latinx progressive media platform that is reporting immigration news the mainstream media overlooks. They know what people at the borders need, and they are making sure they get it.

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