Chattanooga Times Free Press

Migrants face fear and loneliness, one town offers them support

- BY JESSE BEDAYN

FORT MORGAN, Colo. — Magdalena Simon’s only consolatio­n after immigratio­n officers handcuffed and led her husband away was the contents of his wallet, a few bills.

The hopes that had pushed her to trudge thousands of miles from Guatemala in 2019, her son’s small frame clutched to her chest, ceded to despair and loneliness in Fort Morgan, a ranching outpost on Colorado’s eastern plains, where some locals stared at her too long and the wind howls so fiercely it once blew the doors half off a hotel.

The pregnant Simon tried to mask the despair every morning when her toddlers asked, “Where’s Papa?”

To millions of migrants who have crossed the U.S. southern border in the past few years, stepping off Greyhound buses in places across America, such feelings can be constant companions. What Simon would find in that unassuming city of a little more than 11,400, however, was a community that pulled her in, connecting her with legal council, charities, schools and soon friends, a unique support network built by generation­s of immigrants.

In the small town, migrants are building quiet lives, far from big cities like New York, Chicago and Denver that have struggled to house asylumseek­ers and from the halls of Congress where their futures are bandied about in negotiatio­ns.

The Fort Morgan migrant community has become a boon for newcomers, nearly all of whom arrive from perilous journeys to new challenges: pursuing asylum cases; finding a paycheck big enough for food, an attorney and a roof; placing their kids in school; and navigating a language barrier, all while facing the threat of deportatio­n.

The United Nations used the community, 80 miles northeast of Denver, as a case study for rural refugee integratio­n after a thousand Somalis arrived to work in meatpackin­g plants in the late 2000s. In 2022, grassroots groups sent migrants living in mobile homes to Congress to tell their stories.

In the past year, hundreds more migrants have arrived in Morgan County. More than 30 languages are spoken in Fort Morgan’s only high school, which has interpreto­rs for the most common languages and a phone service for others. On Sundays, Spanish is heard from the pulpits of six churches.

The demographi­c shift in recent decades has forced the community to adapt: Local organizati­ons hold monthly support groups, train students and adults about their rights, teach others how to drive, ensure kids are in school and direct people to immigratio­n attorneys.

Simon herself now tells her story to those stepping off buses. The community can’t wave away the burdens, but they can make them lighter.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ ?? On Dec. 15, Amy Bautista Lopez, 7, left, daughter of a community organizati­on leader, teaches the ABC’s in English to a 4-year-old migrant who arrived in the U.S. within the past month, in Fort Morgan, Colo.
AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ On Dec. 15, Amy Bautista Lopez, 7, left, daughter of a community organizati­on leader, teaches the ABC’s in English to a 4-year-old migrant who arrived in the U.S. within the past month, in Fort Morgan, Colo.

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