Enterprise-Record (Chico)

People yearn to connect across borders amid pandemic holiday

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To slow the spread of COVID-19, the United States, Canada and Mexico agreed in March to close their shared borders to nonessenti­al travel.

Nine months later, it’s Christmas. Families across the world are disconnect­ed, but perhaps none more than those trapped on opposite sides of an internatio­nal border. Some legally can’t cross, and others can’t afford to endure quarantine­s if they do.

Yet, the holiday spirit survives. Along both borders, AP photograph­ers found families connecting in smaller, more intimate ways, overcoming unusual obstacles for shared celebratio­ns.

At the U. S.-Mexico border, most years bring festive Las Posadas celebratio­ns; the centuries- old tradition practiced in Mexico reenacts through song Mary and Joseph’s search for refuge in Bethlehem.

Not this year. In addition to virus-related restrictio­ns, people face another barrier: President Donald Trump’s border wall that stretches hundreds of miles and is still under constructi­on.

A little girl in Arizona recently stuck her arm through giant steel slats of the border wall, wrangling a baby doll as she looked to the sky. A little boy reached through the wall for a hug, looking tired and serious.

Contrast that with the scenes 2,500 miles away on the U.S.- Canada border.

A short strip of yellow police tape is the only thing

dividing Derby Line, Vermont, and Stanstead, Quebec.

On a recent day, the mood outside the majestic, Victorian- style library where people from both

countries come to congregate was festive and lightheart­ed.

A family unfolded chairs in the snow, bundled in winter coats on both sides of the border. They cheerfully exchanged Christmas cards across the police tape, chatting amiably as if there were no barrier.

A Canadian border policeman came by but only to make someone move their car.

Travel 2,800 miles west, to Peace Arch Historical State Park in Blaine, Washington, where Canadians walked from a street parallel to the border across a rain- soaked ditch separating the two countries, many carrying tents, sleeping bags, food and other belongings for a visit with Americans.

To enter the U. S., they navigated a short but slippery downhill. Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers checked identifica­tion documents of Canadians as they returned. A sign that read “Leaving United States Border” reminded them of the internatio­nal divide.

Couples romanced in the park; children played. Faith Dancey of White Rock, British Columbia, was all smiles with her bridal gown blowing in the wind as she walked across neatly groomed grass with her new husband. Drew MacPherson of Bellingham, Washington, gave her a joyful piggyback ride before her return to Canada. He stayed in the United States.

It’s not so simple at the Mexico border. In Calexico, California, a planned cross- border celebratio­n happened only in the U. S. because a constructi­on site blocked access to participan­ts in Mexicali, Mexico, a sprawling industrial city of 1 million people.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Framed by the border fence, asylum seeking families attend a Las Posadas event at the U.S.-Mexico border wall, on the Mexico side on Dec. 15 in Douglas, Ariz.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Framed by the border fence, asylum seeking families attend a Las Posadas event at the U.S.-Mexico border wall, on the Mexico side on Dec. 15 in Douglas, Ariz.

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