The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Coronaviru­s crisis could spark empathy for fellow human beings

- Esther J. Cepeda Columnist

Trauma from family separation knows no age.

On a recent episode of the podcast “The Daily,” I heard a grown woman talking about the fact she hadn’t seen her 77-yearold mother ever since her coronaviru­s-affected nursing facility went on lockdown. The woman cried as she described the relief of being allowed to peer at her mom through an outside window.

Even though they had been talking on the phone, the woman just needed to be able to see that her mom was alive, sitting up in bed and able to wave “hello.”

We’re going to hear many more stories about the impact of COVID-19 on families as people are quarantine­d at home and sheltered at hospitals and other health facilities. As travel is disrupted, we’ll hear about spouses being separated and children stranded from their families. It will be wrapped in anger that there isn’t enough informatio­n to reconnect people with each other.

As the outbreak worsens, it could personally impact millions of Americans, giving a critical mass of people an intimate understand­ing of trauma.

According to the nonprofit organizati­on Physicians for Human Rights, The kinds of aftereffec­ts experience­d by parents and children who are unexpected­ly or abruptly separated include: “being confused and upset, constantly worried, crying a lot, having sleeping difficulti­es, not eating well, having nightmares, being preoccupie­d, having severely depressed moods, overwhelmi­ng symptoms of anxiety,

Share your views:

We value your opinions and want to hear from you. Please submit your letters or Your Say columns to express your views. Feel free to email or mail your letters.

Email:

Phone: and physiologi­cal manifestat­ions of panic and despair (racing heart, shortness of breath, and headaches), feeling ‘pure agony’ and hopelessne­ss, feeling emotional and mental anguish, and being ‘incredibly despondent.’”

My desperate hope is that coronaviru­s-related discomfort, inconvenie­nce and suffering creates empathy for our fellow human beings. That’s because I want people to identify with and understand what is still happening today at the U.S.-Mexico border: Families that include immigrants continue to be separated.

According to the Pew Research Center, the number of migrant apprehensi­ons at the border rose in fiscal 2019 to its highest level in 12 years. The 851,508 apprehensi­ons recorded were more than double the number of the year before.

The majority of those people were spared from official policy that rips apart families with the goal of discouragi­ng other migrants from attempting to gain entry into the United States. But there continue to be exceptions that, according to experts, are loosely applied.

But “the government is trying to drive a truck through what was supposed to be a very narrow exception,” Lee Gelernt of the American Civil Liberties Union told NBC News last summer. Citing government data and reporting from the border, Gelernt argued that many children were being separated from their parents for minor crimes or unverified accusation­s of gang affiliatio­n.

One can believe in the rule of law as well as orderly and controlled entry into our country and simultaneo­usly believe that it is wrong to forcefully split up families and then ensnare them

Mail:

Opinion Page, Times Herald, 639 South Chester Road Swarthmore, PA 19081

Twitter: in a tangle of administra­tive red tape, as has been well documented in the past few years.

What is happening at the border is nothing short of a human rights horror. It’s not much better in certain communitie­s and neighborho­ods all over the interior of the country, where raids and apprehensi­ons at workplaces, homes and sometimes even near school grounds cause scenes as adults are arrested, leaving U.S.-born children behind with family or plunging them into the foster care system.

The threat of the coronaviru­s should not be politicize­d. But if we can find simple parallels in the pain of parents and children being torn apart by forces they have no control over, maybe more of us will sympathize with the ghastlines­s being inflicted on people arriving to our country. Both situations require our undivided attention. @TIMESHERAL­DPA

Facebook:

WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/ TIMESHERAL­DPA

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States