walking west...

we are...east of Eden
Showing posts with label Unaccompanied alien children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unaccompanied alien children. Show all posts

June 14, 2012

Lazarus times 8,541

May 2012
Lazarus times 8,541
or, are we nationally destined for a place of torment?

  • There have been 8,541 unaccompanied alien children picked up by US Border Patrol since October of 2011.
  • I have written about my view of the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus before, you can find that here.

God loves people, period. Regardless of socio-economic standing, race, nationality, etc. And scripture is filled with examples of God judging systems and nations. Isaiah, Amos, and Revelation are good places to begin a study on this.

Please read the parable below and change identities as follows - change this text to United States of America, change this text to Central American victims of injustice, systemic corruption, and violence.

"There was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every day. At his gate was laid a beggar named Lazarus, covered with sores and longing to eat what fell from the rich man's table. Even the dogs came and licked his sores.

The time came when the beggar died and the angels carried him to Abraham's side. The rich man also died and was buried. In Hades, where he was in torment, he looked up and saw Abraham far away, with Lazarus by his side. So he called to him, 'Father Abraham, have pity on me and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, because I am in agony in this fire.'

But Abraham replied, 'Son, remember that in your lifetime you received your good things, while Lazarus received bad things, but now he is comforted here and you are in agony. And besides all this, between us and you a great chasm has been set in place, so that those who want to go from here to you cannot, nor can anyone cross over from there to us.'"

  • Why did the Rich Man end up in the place of torment?
  • When are we going to stop policing the Middle/Far East and pay attention to our "gate"?
  • How long can we ignore the things that God is interested in and expect God to bless us?





June 13, 2012

¡Rey de reyes!

May 2012

¡Rey de reyes!
or, Soothed by the Christ Hymn of Colossians 1


First, here are a few things you should know:

  • I just finished an intense, 6 month study of the Colossian letter from the New Testament
  • I like to solve problems, my mind is wired this way and a good problem that needs solving makes my pulse quicken.
  • Several of the Shelter residents had the phrase "¡Rey de reyes! artistically drawn on their school folders. I saw this many times.
  • Rey de reyes in English is King of kings; a term applied in the New Testament to Jesus Christ (1 Timothy 6.15, Revelation 17.14, Revelation 19.16)
  • This is also a prominent phrase in Handel's Messiah, Hallelujah Chorus (which I've included for your enjoyment at the end of this blog)
The sixteen days at the Shelter was a blessing to me - it expanded my worldview and it was a blessing to serve. The hours were long and the sixteen days straight were a little rough but blessing far outweighed hardship. There were many questions that came to mind during this experience:
  • Why have thousands of these boys come up from Central America since October 2011? What would inspire them to endure the difficult journey? What is it that makes their home countries intolerable? 
There are questions that need to be asked and problems that need to be solved:
  • How can we (USA, most blessed country in human history) do to help alleviate the severe poverty in these countries? What can we do to stop the gang violence that is destroying these countries? What about the corruption in these governments? Why do US citizens have to consume so many illegal drugs and thus create large illicit enterprises that bring death and destruction to both sides of the border? Why can't we divert some of the billions of dollars that are being used to secure cheap fossil fuel to our hemisphere? Why can't we divert some of the billions of dollars being used to secure Afghani Lithium to our near neighbors? What are we going to do with all of these kids?
There were times when it seems so hopeless, and I suppose we do not have the capacity or desire to solve these difficult problems. But the phrase on the school folders of these boys and the words of the Christ Hymn from Colossians 1 remind of the only real solution:

"The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for HIM.
He is before all things, and in him all things hold together. And he is the head of the boy, the church; he is the beginning and the firstborn from among the dead, so that in everything he might have the supremacyFor God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all thingswhether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross."

There...problem solved...I can't wait for that day.






June 12, 2012

Grupo Guapo

May 13, 2012

Grupo Guapo
or, Hermanos

Instead of being home on Mother's Day (sorry Brenda & Mom), I spent the day as Leader of Group G. This group was the "brother" group...initially 3 sets of brothers and a couple of other guys added to the mix. The brothers - Jonathan & Erick, Kelvin & Cristian, Juan & Angel, the extras were Oseas and Bryan. The next day Juan & Angel were transferred out and Jose joined the group. These guys were awesome and fun - they acted just like any set of brothers I've been around in my life.

Let me explain the nickname I gave them...

At supper time on this unusual Mother's Day we were in the cafeteria waiting for our turn to go through the food line. One of the brothers, Kelvin, in a quite-brotherly-fashion, calls me over and says:

"David, Cristian (hermano) es muy feo."

I responded in Spanish...

"No, no, no!!!"

"Sí, Dah-veed, Cristian es muy feo!"

Then all of the brothers began calling each other ugly. And brothers turned against unrelated group members, it was ugly. : )

I interjected, "¡Cristian es muy guapo!"

The multiple viewings of the Three Amigos has had a positive socio-cultural impact on me...

And then, "¡Todos ustedes son guapo!"

It was at that moment that Group G became Grupo Guapo; it was at that moment that Grupo Guapo stopped the brotherly bickering and developed swag. Though I didn't work with them exclusively, I saw them many times a day over the next week and we developed a very fun relationship.

And I have to tell this story of ingenuity, or brilliance, as it were...one night in the cafeteria Grupo Guapo called me over their table. Kelvin told me to ask Cristian about his afternoon shower. So I did. The showers have levers that are about 6'6" from the floor, there is a chain hanging down for the occupant, or showerer, to pull on to get water flow. Today, Cristian's chain broke and there was no way this 14 year old boy was going to be able to reach the lever. He didn't complain, file a grievance, forego the shower or anything like that - he simply solved the problem. Cristian took his dirty underwear, twisted them up, lassoed the lever with the underwear and commenced his shower as if it was the most logical thing ever. When he finished telling his story, the rest of Grupo Guapo howled with laughter (as did I). Kelvin said,

"¡Cristian es malo!

I thought for a moment and remembered that I love non-whining, low-maintenance problem solvers like Cristian. I tapped my temple with my index finger and replied,

"¡No, Cristian es brillante!"

I would like to say that our time together ended with this kind of banter and playfulness but it didn't. In fact, I will probably cry as I type this out...

May 17th was my last full day at the shelter. At the end of the day I went out to say goodbye to all of my friends and offer them blessing. This was a fairly difficult task. Since Grupo Guapo was my favorite and the most fun, I saved them for last hoping to end on a high note. To their location I go:

"Yo voy a San Antonio de mañana."

Silence...silence broken by Jose,

"¡No se puede ir, Day-bid, no ir!"

"Tengo que"

"¡No se puede ir, no!"

At this point Bryan started sobbing, Jonathan & Erick had tears rolling down their cheeks, Kelvin dropped his head and Jose buried his face in his towel. Cristian is the only one not crying - he stood up and said that he knew he couldn't hug me (government rules) so he gave me a firm, stoic handshake. I was speechless and my eyes were flooded. Bryan stopped crying long enough to tell one of my co-workers that he had never had a friend like me. At this point I could do nothing but mutter a "Dios bendiga" and walked away. These boys are so hungry for love and affirmation and extremely grateful when they receive even a meager amount...I am still processing my emotions from this evening.

p.s. - I saw Grupo Guapo the next morning as I had a little unfinished business at the Shelter, they were passing by, all smiles!

"¡Buenas dias, Dah-veed!"

"Good morning, Day-bid!"

And Cristian, last in line, walks by, taps his index finger on his temple and says,

"¡Brillante!"



June 10, 2012

¡Muy frío, Dah-veed!

Everyday at the shelter, 2012

¡Muy frío, Dah-veed!
or, David, it is freezing in this place, do something about it or let us go outside where it is tolerable
or, in our abundance we have become a tad spoiled...


During the day the temperature inside the shelter (gymnasium) hovered around eighty degrees, not bad compared to the scalding hot temps outside in deep south Texas. It was easy to tell the difference between kids from Central America and the people from North America (besides the obvious age difference). Inside the gym every day, the Central America kids would be freezing - their arms tucked inside of their t-shirts trying to maintain body temp. The North Americans would be walking around fanning themselves with clipboards, papers, books - whatever was available in effort to keep from spontaneously combusting.

Another difference was in the cafeteria...the NA's would pick around on the food tray eating half or less of the food on the tray, then throwing the rest in the trash can. Conversely, the CA's would devour everything on their tray - the coleslaw, the broccoli, the green beans, the mystery meat - everything. One kid even asked why we threw so much away. I told him what I tell everyone else:

"Dude, you gotta go check out this documentary on Netflix!"

(I didn't really say that, probably said something like, ¿Quién sabe? But since we are on the subject, you should go check out this documentary.)

Difícil

May 11, 2012

Difícil
or, letting others down

My friend Luis, whom I first met in Clinical Observation and became one of my favorite friends, was always happy, always smiling, and always ready to practice his English. Did I mention that in the face he looks a lot like Tiger Woods? Look at the image on the right, take off the golf hat, imagine Tiger wearing a blue t-shirt and you have Luis.

And when I saw him sitting in phone call room hunched over and sobbing, I knew of nothing else to do but sit with him while he cried. My co-worker Paula encouraged me to stay with him.

When he noticed that I was beside him he straightened up, dabbed his eyes and tried to pretend that he had not been crying.

"¿Está bien, Luis?"

"Lo siento, es difícil."

Luis went on to tell me that he had left his home in Honduras, bound for the United States in order to work and send money back to his dad, mom and family. This family's hope was pinned on this 17 year old boy. Luis felt as though he had failed them - he didn't make it to the "land flowing with milk and honey," instead he was caught and placed in this shelter.

"No, no Luis, lo siento."

I'm sorry that we live in world that allows gang violence to decimate your country. I'm sorry that we live in a world of such abundance that we have heated car seats and macaroni & cheese pizza, yet right at our gates are people that live in unimaginable poverty. I'm sorry that corruption rules the Americas. I'm sorry that you didn't somehow make it to my doorstep because we would have figured something out...

June 5, 2012

Feliz Cumpleaños Felix...

May 10, 2012

Feliz Cumpleaños Felix
or, What a Difference a Day Makes

On May 9, 2012 Felix was hanging out in this blessed place with his peers. He had been in this place for a few weeks - plenty of food, clean clothes, controlled climate, school, and a large group of people to help take care of him.

On May 10, 2012 Felix turned 18 years old. Happy birthday Felix! And in the eyes of the US government, he turned into an adult offender, a violator of our immigration laws. As such, he had to be separated from the minors (for their safety) and turned over to an adult immigration prison. He had to be isolated from the rest of the group at the Emergency Shelter until his transport arrived. I was called upon to sit with him in isolation. And that's what we did for the next eight hours. We shared a couple of meals, we didn't talk, he fidgeted on his cot, he sat up and prayed often.

Finally, about 5:30pm and thirty minutes from his transport time, his tongue broke loose...he told me about his family in Guatemala - his dad, his mom, his three younger sisters. He told me about the mountains of Guatemala and about the Resplendent Quetzal, the national bird. He told me about the freight train ride from Guatemala to the Texas border. He told about the two guys that died on that trip - one didn't get low enough going through a tunnel and the other fell off the top of the train and was sucked under. He told me about how he was coming to the Estados Unidos to work so he could send money back to his family.

After hearing his story, I told him that he was very brave and very strong and that I was honored to know him. He replied:

"El evangelio es mi confianza."

My Spanish is fairly weak so I had to confirm what I had heard - "Felix, por favor, repita."

"El evangelio es mi confianza."

"Otra vez..."

"El evangelio es mi confianza."

------------------------------------------

At 6:00pm the transport arrives. Felix and I say our goodbyes.

"Dios bendiga, Felix."

"Gracias, adios."

And he was led away in shackles and handcuffs...

June 2, 2012

Soy un aventurero

May 9, 2012

Yo Soy Aventurero
or, adventurers


Josh, Nic and I on top of Mount Shavano, Colorado
On this day at the Shelter I wore my hiking boots because they are comfortable. My pants of the day were a pair of khaki cargo pants that I sometimes wear when walking in the mountains. If you look closely at this photo from the top of Mount Shavano in Colorado, you will notice that I am wearing pants (to which you say "thank you"), the same pants I wore today.

My friend, Erick from Salvador asked if I was an adventurer. I thought for a moment...I have tagged the summits of a fair number of 14ers and a few 13ers in Colorado; I have been on a fair number of back country camping trips; I have rock climbed; I have rappelled; I have been free-diving in the Caribbean; I have been white water rafting; I have ridden (stupidly) an inner-tube down the swollen Animas River in Silverton, CO; and have been on many adventures.

"Si, Erick, soy un aventurero!"

The more I thought about it the more I realized that most of my adventures were very predictable, with safety assured. Except for some of the mountain trips, the (stupid) inner-tube trip down the Animas, and the free-diving in the Caribbean, all of my adventures were more like theme park rides - very little risk and a brief adrenaline rush.

Then I thought about 17 year old Erick's trip from El Salvador to the Emergency Shelter in Harlingen, Texas...

mountains of Guatemala
Here is some detail I found online about this trip:

There are two ways to travel to the United States: by coyote, or on your own if you know the path.  It takes between two to three weeks either way--hopping a train through Mexico and then walking through the desert without sleep and avoiding border guards for two - seven days until one reaches a safe house.  

Coyotes are guides who are paid to take groups of people from Central/Latin America to the United States.  The current going rate for a coyote is $7000/person from El Salvador to Mexico, and between $7000-$8000 from Mexico to a major city in the United States.  When considering these numbers, please remember that those who work on the coffee fincas in El Salvador are paid $50 every two weeks during the coffee picking season.  For the rest of the year, they are often out of work and must support their families of between 4-6 people with that money which they make over these few months in the year.  Thus, the payment of $15,000 for the chance alone to get to the United States is an incredible amount.  This $15,000 does not in any way guarantee travel to the US--it only guarantees three chances to attempt to make the journey with a coyote.  As one man said though, by the time one makes it to the third chance, s/he is either in prison or dead.

The danger of traveling with a coyote cannot be underestimated.  One must remember that because this is inherently an illegal venture, there is nothing to which the coyotes can be held accountable for the wellbeing of the people in their group, other than their reputation.  They typically transport drugs, and they hold absolute power over their group without necessarily having a reason to ensure that they all make it to the United States alive.  Women in these groups are often raped, young children die, and people who just were not well prepared for the journey are often left in the desert.  This inequality of power means that those immigrants who collect $15,000 from their family and friends to make the journey and pin all of their hope on this one person are an incredibly vulnerable population with almost no way to hold the coyote accountable.  The journey is even more dangerous for women.  

Whether traveling with or without a coyote, one must avoid the Mexican police, the drug cartels, and navigate the desert.  Since crossing the border is quite difficult, immigrants often walk across the desert for several days straight until they reach a major city where they can usually obtain assistance.



No ropes, no belay, no life-vests, no experienced AND trustworthy guides, no water, no food, no credit cards, little money, and immeasurable amounts of courage...

"Erick, usted es verdadero aventurero..."

May 29, 2012

Friends

May 9, 2012

Friends
or, nuevos amigos

It has generally been easy for me to make friends with adolescents guys; perhaps, as I have been told, it is because I have the same level of maturity...nevertheless, most of my best friends are guys under 22 years of age. On this trip I wondered if I could form friendships with a significant language barrier between myself and the kids I was serving. I was pleasantly surprised with the ease of this and also surprised by the similarities between these Central American young men and the young men of suburban San Antonio. The 11-12 year old boys idolized and mimicked the older boys; the 13-14 year old boys farted and blamed each other and joked around a lot; the 16-17 year old young men loved competition and were very fastidious (translated - used copious amounts of hair gel and lots of time in front of the mirror) about the way they looked. If you don't dwell too much on where they are from and what they have been through you will find that they are just regular kids. It was a pleasure to be around them. Here are a few of my new friends:


  • Erick, El Salvador - helped me with Spanish, more to follow...
  • Luis, Honduras - always smiling, eager to learn English and always practicing every time I saw him
  • Daniel, Honduras - always happy; he told me one day that he wanted me to adopt him because he, like me, was handsome and strong (his words, not mine). The irony of this was the difference in our hairstyles - Daniel with what would best be described as a massive "fro" and I have the opposite..
my hair = not a massive "fro"

  • Felix, Guatemala - quiet young man of remarkable courage, more to follow...
  • My posse from Group G, aka Grupo Guapo - Erick, Jonathan, Cristian, Kelvin, Bryan, Jose, Oseas, more on these guys to follow...
  • Eduardo, El Salvador - one of my Spanish tutors
  • Estiven, Costa Rica - "El Costa Rican"
It is highly unlikely that I will see any of these guys again, this side of eternity...but am hoping for a future "5 People You Meet in Heaven" moment. They had a profound impact on me.

On a related side note, my thoughts on immigration have evolved over the years and largely influenced by a reading of Deuteronomy with a missional hermeneutic. My thoughts have been cemented after 16 days in an Emergency Shelter in Harlingen, Texas. The faces, names, and stories are etched in my memory. This has already caused a little friction between my Republican Christian friends and myself; oh well...

Here's a few decent documentaries on the human side of this debate:


May 26, 2012

Observación clínica

Observación clínica

Most of the jóvenes were never vaccinated like kids in the US. Many suffered from poor nutrition. And they encountered all sorts of afflictions on the journey north. Despite this, most arrive in
remarkably good health and they are given top notch medical care while in the shelter. There were are few that were sick; during my time there we had - a possible TB, chicken pox, ringworm, scabies, shingles and a few gastro-intestinal bugs that were never defined.

These guys were isolated from the group and placed in Clinical Observation. In Clinical they watched movies all day, had meals delivered to them, never had to wait in line for restrooms or showers and all of their school work was self paced.

Clinical Observation was my favorite place to hang out because it was quieter and easier to exchange English for Spanish lessons. It was there that I met two of my best friends of the trip - Luis, 17 year old from Honduras and Erick, 17 year old from El Salvador. I learned more Spanish from these two guys than anyone else and probably more than I learned in Spanish I as a freshman at Stephenville High School years ago. As you probably know, Stephenville is not the epicenter of Spanish language instruction and immersion...

And for the record, I returned home without catching any infectious disease. I attribute this to a freakishly strong immune system. Germ-X, who needs it!!!



Speaking of freakish...Blogger has gone into some strange formatting mode...sorry.

Oraciones

May 7, 2012

Oraciones
or, the most normal response 

In an earlier post I mentioned that these young men arrive at the shelter wearing only the tattered clothes that they wore on their journey. Our organization gives them a new pair of basketball shorts, a t-shirt, underwear, socks and a pair of sandals to fill out their wardrobe. Additionally they are fed three square meals each day with snacks in between. They immediately start basic schooling and are given counsel. And extraordinary effort is made to re-unify them with their parents.

Contrast this with their sufferings on the journey north and the inhumane way they were treated by the coyotes, cartels, and climate. They are now in a place of blessing.

As such, many kneel beside their cots in prayer. Most pray before every meal without provocation from their adult leader. A reminder, these are boys - mostly between the ages of 12 and 17; and the most normal response imaginable for them is to pray.

On May 7 I had the privilege of being the temporary leader for Group P - Carlos, Henry, Jose, Oscar, Hugo, Edin, Walter, and Rudy. I went through the entire day with them - meal, school, soccer, rest. At meal time I noticed that 7 of the 8 prayed. And I'm not talking about "God-is-great-God-is-good-let-us-thank-Him-for-our-food-Amen" or the ever popular and brief, "Praise-the-Lord-praise-the-meat-Good-Lord-let-us-eat-Amen" prayer. Some of these prayers lasted up to five minutes. I asked Rudy, seated closest to me, the Spanish word for prayer - orar, oraciones - the most normal response to a God that blesses us beyond what we deserve.

Padre nuestro, 
que estás en el cielo.
Santificado sea tu nombre.
Venga tu reino.
Hágase tu voluntad en la tierra como en el cielo.
Danos hoy nuestro pan de cada día.
Perdona nuestras ofensas,
como también nosotros perdonamos a los que nos ofenden.
No nos dejes caer en tentación y líbranos del mal.
Amén.

May 25, 2012

Cinco de Mayo, El Mejor Dia de mi Vida

May 5, 2012

Cinco de Mayo, El Mejor Dia de mi Vida
or, the best day of my life!

The weekday schedule for the shelter residents is not much different from most kids in the US. The day is consumed with schoolwork. For these guys it was English, Math, Geography, Art, and Outside physical activities (loosely translated means soccer). The weekdays were busy. The weekends were time relax.

My first Saturday in Harlingen was May 5, 2012, a day to celebrate Mexican heritage and pride. So what do we (US citizens and citizens of Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador) do? We throw a big Cinco de Mayo party including pizza, coca-cola, sandia, palomitas, and raspas. We had a karaoke contest that I called "Central American Idol," we danced, we listened to music and we ate.

After supper, the third full meal of the day, a 14 year old boy from Honduras waddled by to his cot and said, "este es el mejor dia de mi vida!"

Maybe today was a glimpse of banquets in the kingdom of God...

Fe

May 4, 2012

Fe
or, as the deer...

With half the day on Wednesday, May 2 and two full days (13 plus hours each) on Thursday and Friday under my belt, I sent a text to Brenda on Friday night and said with confidence, "I'm not going to make it. I'm not sure I have the physical or emotional strength to finish." She told me to suck it up...

I wept again on Friday evening. After supper there was a devotional in the gym presented by a Harlingen pastor. The service was in Spanish but I was able to pick up enough to know what was going on. The faith of these young men was striking, my estimate was that eighty to ninety percent of them worshiped with a real devotion that night.

I have had the privilege of singing the song, "As the Deer" with brothers and sisters of the faith for many years now. This Friday was the first time I sang it with kids whose only possessions were a set of tattered, dirty clothes and a new set of issued clothes that included basketball shorts, underwear, t-shirt, socks and a pair of sandals...AND NOTHING ELSE. Their hands were lifted in praise during these lines:

"You alone are my strength, my shield;
To you alone may my spirit yield.
You alone are my heart's desire 
and I long to worship You."

I have a good friend who has spent a good deal of time in Honduras, he told me a few months ago that he believes we (US Christians) have too many safety nets in place to be able to experience a deep, rich faith. I agree.




La primera vez

May 2, 2012

Day 1 – La Primera Vez

or, the first time..

Wednesday, May 2nd, very early in the morning…

I entered this day with very little information. All that I knew was that my role was as an Emergency Youth Worker at an Emergency Shelter in Harlingen, Texas. The youth, or "jovenes" that I would be working with in this emergency situation were going to be far different than the suburban teenagers I have worked with before. The exact details of what I would be doing, who I would report to, how long I would be here, when does the day start, when does the day end, where am I staying, what do we do about meals...all a mystery, but I have always claimed to thrive in the unknown, we’ll see…

This was not an accident or random occurrence, let me fill in the back-story...there was a sequence of events that ultimately put me in the back of a fifteen passenger van with four strangers on May 2, 2012.

The Back Story

September 2010 – I was teaching a series on the Book of Acts and the mission of the church. As an example of how people and the institution become distracted and drift off towards division instead of unity, we watched the movie, “Hotel Rwanda.” The story of this massacre in the most Christian nation on the African continent captivated me, so I explored this topic in more depth. One of the books I read was, "Mirror to the Church" by Emmanuel Katangole. Katangole was Rwandan but serving in Uganda, his front row seat to this human travesty gave him a very interesting insight. This book led me to another of his books, "Reconciling All Things." In this book, Katangole talks about the brokenness of the world and the role of the church in repairing the brokenness, he asserts that the church should find brokenness and step into those gaps as repair agents. The idea of the church filling gaps in a broken humanity captivated me. To make a long story short (too late), I have desperately been looking for gaps to fill. Normal life in the institutional church world is boring me…

June 2011 – A friend and I visited a mutual friend that was detained in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement Facility (a softer, more marketable replacement for Immigration Prison) in Aurora, Colorado. After our visit and on the way back to downtown Denver, my friend and I get stuck in traffic on IH-70 east of downtown for an hour or so. The blessing of traffic is that it sometimes forces us to slow down and talk. In our conversation, he highly recommends the documentary "Which Way Home."  
A few days later at my home in San Antonio I watched this documentary. It journals the travel and plight of a four boys as they travel from Central America to the “land of milk and honey.” This documentary piqued my interest in this particular brokenness, a brokenness that is happening right in my back yard.

July 2011 – I recommended this documentary to a friend of mine in San Antonio that has experience with Immigration issues. Shortly thereafter, he arranges a meeting with a guy that works for the Department of Health and Human Services and is responsible for placing all of these Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC). We shared coffee and conversation for a couple of hours, the issue of unaccompanied children crossing our border is a massive problem and is growing larger and it is a humanitarian story of crisis that is mostly untold...

March 2012 – My wife read a news story on one of the local news sites about the downtown YMCA being used to temporarily house some of the UACs. There are no organizational names mentioned in the article but there is a picture of a 15 passenger van. The name of the organization is on the side of the van. I google the name and find their website. It is a great organization doing much good across the globe in the name of Christ. They also have a Career Opportunities tab, I search and find a few jobs that I am marginally qualified for and send them my resume. They called the next day, interviewed me two days later and immediately put me on their roster of Emergency Youth Care Workers. Now I wait for my first assignment.

May 2, 2012 – My first assignment comes in, sixteen days in an Emergency Shelter in Harlingen, Texas.

The Van

At 7:00 a.m. I stand in the foyer of the organization’s headquarters with nine strangers, most of them look as perplexed as me. I ask the receptionist if she has more detail, she replies, “If you’re going to Harlingen put your luggage out by the vans and wait here.” Thanks for the clarity. I introduce myself to the others and not much more is shared. The curiosity builds. Finally at 7:30 a.m. we get orders to load up the two vans, the ten of us are split into groups of five. And so it begins, the only certainty is that I am in a van headed south on Highway 281 with four strangers. By the time we reach the south side of San Antonio we begin to loosen up a little and make introductions – Joe, our driver, is a retired Firehouse captain from San Antonio; Jim, the co-pilot, a retired School Administrator from northeast Texas; Paula, a housewife from San Antonio; and Ester, a single mom from San Antonio. With the formalities out of the way, I get straight to the point.

“What am I supposed to be doing here? I have been given no job description except Emergency Youth Worker and no list of expectations.”

Joe and Jim were no help, they were working on the facility/logistics side. Paula and Ester, on their second assignment, were of some help. They told me of their experiences in the first assignment but it was still very vague. They assured me that it was going to fine, just stay close to them and learn, they will take care of me…as the highway rolled by on Highway 281 and still no clear expectations for this trip, I developed a plan. And the plan should be no plan at all but rather a way of life that is fluid in any and every situation I might find myself in – suburban youth ministry, homeless ministry, the corporate world, the golf course, in my neighborhood – the plan - do my best to be Christ-like in the Emergency Shelter, to be the presence of Christ there and to be a peacemaker, an agent of love, mercy, grace, and a servant in any way possible.

The First Time

We arrived in Harlingen in the mid-afternoon. After checking in the hotel that was to be our home for the next sixteen days, we head out to the shelter on the rural east side of town. The shelter was on a campus that was formerly a Theological Seminary, then a Private School, then a Youth Summer Camp, then a Retreat Center, and currently home for several hundred adolescent immigrants. The campus has several dormitories for long term residents (more on this later), administrative offices, a large kitchen and dining hall, and a gym/recreational complex. The Emergency Shelter was in the gym/recreational complex. From the outside the gym looked like any other high school gymnasium except for the Border Patrol vans and Highway Patrol cars that were scattered in the parking lot and the Mobile Clinic RV that was parked next to the front doors. The soccer field and pavilion adjacent to gym had a more prison-like look to it. It was surrounded by a ten feet tall chain-link fence topped with concertina wire. On the sidewalk between the gym and the field stood a row of eight Port-A-Potties. On the east side of the field were two large trailers - mobile shower facilities - each with eight small shower stalls. The loud hum of portable generators dominated the sound waves outside of the gym.

This was the first time for me in any kind of Emergency Shelter. I have been in a few homeless shelters and transitional living shelters. I tried to volunteer to help at the Emergency Shelters that housed Hurricane Katrina refugees in San Antonio but was never able to get on the roster. Our church was able to house some refugees fleeing Houston because of Hurricane Rita one year after Katrina, but this is the first time I have been in a bona-fide Emergency Shelter dedicated to serving those whose lives have been upended.

The Emergency Shelter was inside the gym; what appeared to be a normal high school gym on the outside was anything but on the inside…this court of this gym was converted to a temporary bedroom for 128 boys between the ages of 10 and 17 – the court divided into five sections by portable curtains. Each section had four clusters of eight cots each. All of the nooks and crannies of the gym were used for supply storage. The Home Team Locker Room was used for a staff break room, the Visitor’s Locker Room was the Intake (more later) and Phone Call Room. This place was a beehive of activity - cots, work tables, partitions, medical staff, janitorial staff, logistics staff, direct care workers, and over one hundred twenty eight jovenes, the reason we are all here.

It was the first time I have been thrown into a job that I had no idea what to do, it was a baptism of fire...when we walked into the gym everyone dispersed – Joe and Jim in one direction, Ester in another, and Paula was summoned by one of the permanent staff. I stood there alone, a different person in a different place of a different language wondering what I had gotten myself in to and wondering how I was going to make it through sixteen consecutive days in this place. After a couple of minutes of awkwardness, Paula came back to me and said that I was going to help her with phone calls. Okay, it’s all coming together…not.

She led me in front of the bleachers to the mid-court corridor, then through the corridor to the Visitor’s Locker Room. The toilets and showers in this Locker Room were boarded up. In the middle of the room were two folding tables with two folding chairs on one side and two on the other side and one on each end. On the tables were two three ring binders and two cordless phones. Two walls of the Locker Room had built in benches and on the benches sat eight boys. This group of boys, or young men, or jovenes ranged between fifteen and seventeen years old. They were all clean cut, showered and dressed in basketball shorts, t-shirts, white socks, and plastic government issued huaraches. Our task at this moment was to help these boys make first contact with their families since being detained.

Paula called the boys two by two to our table, when they were seated she would ask them for a number to call. The jovenes would have a small scrap of paper with a U.S. or Central American phone number on it. While she initiated the phone call, I took the number and began filling out the Phone Log Form. Detail oriented work, forms and administration are not my areas of giftedness but I try to remember my pledge to serve in any way…

“¿Como te llamas?”
“Erick, Jose, Martin, Rudin, Misael, Jorge, Miguel, Gino…”
“¿De donde eres?”
“Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras…”

I had the easy part of the job, logging the names, countries, and numbers called of these young men. Paula was the one that did all of the heavy lifting on this assignment. When mom or dad or some other relative picked up the call on the other end she identified herself and our organization. She went on to tell them that their son was in the United States and in custody. She would then tell the worried parent or relative that they were not detained by La Migra but by a church organization and that their son was being cared for – comida, ropas, escuela, y médico – food, clothes, education, and medical care. She would then tell them that their son was sitting there with her and that he wanted to talk to them. Paula carried out this work with the grace and compassion that only a mother of three could muster – I am certain this grace and compassion traveled through the phone system to the nervous mamá on the other end of the phone.

“Hola Mamá…” or sometimes, “Hola Papá.”

It was the first time that these boys made contact with their families since being detained by U.S. Border Patrol. After the grueling 2000+ kilometer journey, the first time they hear their mother's voice they wept. And particularly, the faces of Gino and Misael are etched into my memory. On the bench before their calls home their countenance was stoic and brave. After their conversations, fear and longing. They move to the metal chairs in the corners of the Locker Room to make room for the next set of calls. These brave young men sit hunched over in the corner trying to hide their tears. My experience with adolescents tell me that these boys needed a hug or a human touch to comfort them but government restrictions prohibit any kind of physical contact. And there was compassionate Paula giving them tissues…

“Esta bien, esta bien mijo.”

This was the first time I have been personally confronted with a problem as large as this. This was the first time I had seen such a collision of prosperity and despair. This was the first time I have been so close to a problem of this magnitude that I could look into the eyes of the suffering and see the tears rolling down their cheeks. Close enough to hear their tender words for their mothers, worlds away.

And questions flooded my mind…what did these boys go through to get to this place? Why are their home countries so unbearable that they endure the journey to this place? How will I be able to endure this emotional roller coaster for the next fifteen days? How can I walk in this place as Jesus walked in dusty Palestine?

Later on that evening in my hotel room, I wept for them and I prayed for them…