Houston Chronicle

Trump wasn’t first, but policy was evil

Nicolas Kristof says the inhumane practice of taking children from their parents fits into annals of barbarism and should never be repeated.

- Contact Kristof at Facebook.com/Kristof, twitter.com/nickkristo­f.

President Donald Trump caved to public pressure and promised to stop separating children from parents at the border. After long insisting he couldn’t do anything about this, he snapped his fingers and changed the policy he had denied was a policy.

Yet the next steps remain unclear and of uncertain legality. Will there be internment camps? This hazy juncture is a useful opportunit­y to draw lessons.

Trump is right that he didn’t begin the practice of wrenching crying children from their parents. It fits into a shameful history:

“My brothers and sisters were bid off first, and one by one, while my mother, paralyzed by grief, held me by the hand. Her turn came, and she was bought by Isaac Riley of Montgomery County. Then I was offered to the assembled purchasers. My mother, half distracted with the thought of parting forever from all her children, pushed through the crowd while the bidding for me was going on, to the spot where Riley was standing. She fell at his feet and clung to his knees, entreating him in tones that a mother only could command to buy her baby as well as herself. … I must have been then between 5 and 6 years old. I seem to see and hear my poor weeping mother now.”

— Josiah Henson, a slave in Maryland, in his account of his life from 1858

“The Negroes at home are quite disconsola­te but this will soon blow over. They may see their children again in time.”

— Thomas Chaplin, a slave owner, in 1845, quoted in “Help Me to Find My People,” by Heather Andrea Williams

“My mother then turned to (her owner) and cried, ‘Oh, master, do not take me from my child!’ Without making any reply, he gave her two or three heavy blows on the shoulders with his raw hide, snatched me from her arms, handed me to my master, and seizing her by one arm, dragged her back. … The cries of my poor parent became more and more indistinct. … The horrors of that day sank deeply into my heart.”

— Charles Ball, whose 1837 autobiogra­phy of a life in slavery included this discussion of his separation from his mother at age 4

The black family “suffers little by separation.”

— Thomas R. Cobb, a proslavery legal scholar, in 1858

“I stared intently, trying desperatel­y not to lose sight of my mother, my little sister with her hair of gold and sun, my grandmothe­r, my older sisters. I see them always, for I am still looking for them, trying to embrace them one last time. … What remains of that night like no other is an irremediab­le sense of loss, of parting. My mother and my little sister left, and I never said goodbye. It all remains unreal.”

— Elie Wiesel, “Memoirs,” on how the Nazis separated his family during the Holocaust

“‘I’m going to take your child to get bathed.’ That’s one we see again and again. … The child goes off, and in a half an hour, 20 minutes, the parent inquires, ‘Where is my 5-year-old?’ … And they say, “You won’t be seeing your child again.’ ”

— Anne Chandler, Tahirih Justice Center, in Texas Monthly last week

“The children will be taken care of — put into foster care or whatever.”

—Chief of Staff John Kelly last month

“All I can remember is how much my son and I were both crying as they took him away. … It has been about six months since I last saw my son.”

Detainee in an April ACLU lawsuit, on the seizure of his 13-year-old son in October

“Womp womp.” — Corey Lewandowsk­i, a Trump surrogate, mocking family separation­s Tuesday

“My babies started crying when they found out we were going to be separated. It breaks my heart to remember my youngest wail: ‘Why do I have to leave? Mami, I want to stay with you!’ My youngest cried and screamed in protest. … In tears myself, I asked my boys to be brave, and I promised we would be together again soon. … I do not know where my sons are, and I am very worried about them.”

J.I.L., a Salvadoran woman, in the ACLU

“We have an orchestra here.” A Border Patrol agent joking last week as children cried inconsolab­ly after being taken from their parents

So, Mr. President, you’re right that you didn’t start family separation. Today’s practice is not the same as slavery or Nazism, but it still fits neatly into the annals of barbarism. I hope you will genuinely stop this cruelty. One lesson from this history is that while there are always apologists at the time, ultimately we come to appreciate that to wrench shrieking children from the arms of their parents is not just cruel, not just abhorrent, but truly evil.

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