Los Angeles Times

‘Here we go again’

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Re “Trump is defiant on migrants,” June 19

My Jewish mother was 11 years old in 1939 when she was taken from her parents in Nazi Germany to safety in Great Britain as part of the Kindertran­sport.

My mother’s family was not torn apart without warning. The trip was arranged, and Mom had guardians waiting for her. Everyone knew they would be separated, though nobody knew how long they would be apart.

Seventy-nine years later, Mom continues to grapple with the trauma of separation. Mom’s head knows her life was saved, but her heart makes her feel torn and abandoned even after all these decades.

I have spent a lifetime hearing “never again,” yet here we go again. The travesty at our southern border must stop. It is a crime against the humanity of children and parents who are simply seeking safety in our country.

I cannot stomach this cruelty that will scar families for generation­s. I am sick that it is being perpetrate­d in my name.

Jane Drucker Studio City

It was during World War II when my father and his mother, who had just survived the Bergen-Belsen concentrat­ion camp, presented themselves in Switzerlan­d to the local authoritie­s. The Swiss government’s policy on refugees was similar to ours now.

My father was transporte­d to an orphanage in western Switzerlan­d, while his mother was put to work in the east with threats of being deported. For three years, they correspond­ed only by mail, a great difficulty since my father, then a young child, had no formal education (he eventually became a research scientist at Michigan State University and a member of the National Academy of Sciences).

His early life experience­s stayed with him as an adult in the United States. He often talked about the Holocaust and stated in no uncertain terms that the years in Switzerlan­d separated from his mother were the worst.

He would have found our policy at the border to be an intolerabl­e horror and advocated strongly against it. I cannot help but feel shame when I consider the fact that our government is inflicting my father’s pain on children today.

Benjamin Kende

Chicago

Child developmen­t experts say that children separated from their parents at a young age are much more likely to show lifelong negative effects, including lower intelligen­ce, potentiall­y violent behavior, addiction and mental illness.

Separating children from their parents at the border only to put these kids in cages is unconscion­able. It also puts them at significan­t risk, making them vulnerable to predators and self-harm. I urge my elected officials to please reunite these families.

I was born in McAllen, Texas, in 1982 to an undocument­ed mother fleeing violence and a naturalize­d Mexican father. She was given amnesty by President Reagan in 1986 and is now a successful businesswo­man. I am now a doctoral candidate at USC.

As a U.S. citizen, I beg President Trump: See us as human beings. End this humanitari­an crisis now.

Vanessa Angelica Villarreal

Los Angeles

America, you have a president who thinks of himself as a dictator.

I suffered through a few in my native country of Argentina, and I see the gloomy, painful and abhorrent

signs, including demeaning the free press, terrorizin­g the opposition, creating a personalit­y cult and taking children away from parents.

During the “dirty war” in my native country, parents were arrested and the children were given away to keep people in line. The courts aligned themselves with the tyrant, and desperatio­n took hold of the entire country.

What does it take to wake up conformist Americans who believe someone will come to the rescue and make things nice again?

Rose Davina Magnone

Mar Vista

Every day since the conception of laws, lawbreaker­s have been separated from their children. How and why is this any different?

Michael Baskin

Covina

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? TRUMP DEFENDED his immigratio­n policy in remarks made at the White House on Monday.
Evan Vucci Associated Press TRUMP DEFENDED his immigratio­n policy in remarks made at the White House on Monday.

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