AP photo
By
Patricia Asuncion
What Child Is This Who Is Laid to Rest by CBP?
I.
It’s okay, Mariee. we’ll see grandma soon. We’ll just be here
for a little while. We’ll get something to eat soon. They promised.
Instead of joining her mother in New Jersey on March 1,
Yazmin Juarez holds her nineteen-month-old Mariee close,
as if the young single mother can protect her child
inside the human scrap heap of Dilley Immigration Prison.
I told you people, my daughter needs more than this baby aspirin!
She’s got a high fever. She can’t keep your food down. She needs
a real doctor.
Three weeks later, Yazmin and Mariee, already gravely sick,
are released, like a feral cat tires of a dying mouse. They go to grandma.
After six weeks at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia,
Mariee Juarez dies May 10, 2018.
Yazmin Juarez has no more words, only lawyers
with multiple lawsuits against agencies that deny all responsibility.
II.
I know it’s hot, Jakelin, but we’re almost there. Look at all
these other children walking too. We will rest soon. I promise you.
Three days after her seventh birthday, Jakelin and her 29-year-old papa,
Nery Gilberto Caal Cuz are a breath away from the American border,
2,000 miles from home, but
they are arrested near Antelope Wells,
among 163 immigrants, including 50 unaccompanied minors
in a sly mousetrap set outside the front door on December 6, 9:15 pm.
Jakelin, take a little rest, you’ll feel better. It’s late. We must wait for the bus
to come back. The children with no parents had to go first. There will be
plenty water and some food on the bus, you’ll see.
4:30 am, the bus picks them up for the 95-mile trip,
but Jakelin starts vomiting at 5:00 am.
Without food and water for days,
a death sentence for a birthday girl.
Help is 95 miles away. When the bus arrives at 6:30 am,
Jakelin has stopped breathing.
She is airlifted, papa is driven
to El Paso hospital, but it is formality, not rescue.
Jakelin Amei Rosmery Caal Maquin dies at 12:30 am, December 8, 2018.
In detained silence, papa Nery signs no-fault papers.
Far away in silence mama Claudia Maquin weeps
in Q’eqchi when her daughter returns
in a box.
III.
Felipe, you are my little man now. We can do this together. When we get to El Paso,
we can find a nice place for everybody back home. You’ll see. Just keep up. Okay?
Felipe Alonzo-Gomez and his father are arrested December 8, 1pm,
near Paso Del Norte where they stay until their transfer, December 22,
late at night, to less-crowded Alamogordo Border Patrol Station,
like cattle-roundups, for ranchers’ profits.
I’m sorry you don’t feel so good. You must be missing our family too with Christmas
coming. You get some rest. Me and you will be together for Christmas. That’s good.
On Christmas Eve morning, Felipe is treated
for flu symptoms at the hospital. His 103 fever
keeps him there with his father until 3 pm when he is released
with routine ibuprofen & amoxicillin.
At least it’s quiet here tonight because it’s Christmas Eve, Felipe. You can sleep
and wake up feeling better. Tomorrow will be the birth of baby Jesus.
No EMT on duty because of the holiday miracle,
no sickness, no emergencies while Christmas Cat’s away.
Vomiting since 7 pm, agents decide at 10 pm
to transport Felipe and his father to the hospital, but
he loses consciousness on the way.
Felipe Alonzo-Gomez dies at 11:48 pm, December 24, 2018.
No response by the father,
only rhetorical responses by American fat cats.
I – https://abcnews.go.com/US/mother-toddler-died-released-ice-custody-files-wrongful/story?id=57473060
II – https://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-cantu-border-patrol-cruelty-20181218-story.html
III – https://www.cnn.com/2018/12/26/us/cbp-timeline-guatemala-boy-dies/index.html
Patricia Asuncion
Patsy Asuncion’s Cut on the Bias 2016 depicts her bi-racial slant as an inner-city child raised by an immigrant father. Publications include New York Times, vox poetica, New Verse News, Indiana & Loyola University, Fredericksburg literary reviews. Patsy promotes diversity through: her open mic (12,750+ YouTube views); community initiatives; arts boards policies. www.patasuncion.wix.com/patsy-asuncion
It is devastating to know POTUS and his leadership are responsible for this unspeakable heartache and senseless deaths. It goes against everything the USA stands for. Native Americans are the only people who are not immigrants. We are all immigrants. And POTUS married two immigrants! Just saying.
Sigh. Haunting. Well done but so sad to realize.
Heartbreaking. Thank you, Patsy, for making it more real. We need it to be real and not just another article in the paper. Thank you.
It's absolutely heartbreaking, this reality. Thank you for your poignant and truth filled expressions.