Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Parents wait by phone, hoping their immigrant children will call

- By Morgan Lee and Claudia Torrens

NEW YORK » An immigrant father from Guatemala dotes over his despondent teenage daughter during a weekly 10-minute phone call, while other parents wait weeks for the phone to ring.

A mother in Louisiana has phone video chats with her detained 5-year-old son in Texas, while a Honduran asylum-seeker had actual face time with his little girl, visiting her in person. He made sure to bring along a McDonald’s hamburger to share.

Immigrant parents who were separated from their children under President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” policy for illegal border crossings are struggling to communicat­e by any means possible in the age of instant, internatio­nal social media with sons and daughters kept in government-contracted facilities around the country. For most parents, phone calls have been the only connection to their children as the separation­s dragged on for weeks.

Honduran immigrant Carla Garcia waits each day in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on calls for unschedule­d telephone and video conversati­ons with her son at a holding facility in Texas — calls she cannot return. She and 5-year-old Jonathan were separated after crossing the border together in late May. Garcia was released from detention a month later with an ankle monitor and moved in with relatives.

“I was happy to be able to see him, and then it was even more difficult to see him from far away,” she said. “He just looked at me, worried.”

Several parents say it has been difficult or impossible to maintain their composure as children break down in tears, complain of loneliness, ask for clues about when they might be released or think they were abandoned.

“She was crying, inconsolab­ly,” said Guatemalan immigrant Josue Aguilar about his 16-year-old daughter, who he believes is at a holding facility somewhere in Texas. “She said, ‘I don’t want to be here anymore.’ I could only tell her to try and have a little patience.”

Aguilar said he and his daughter have just enough time to console one another before the calls end. They are only allotted 10 minutes.

“They give her one call a week. Ten minutes. It’s just not enough time,” said Aguilar, who moved in with relatives in Atlanta after his release from detention to await asylum proceeding­s.

Released from an immigrant detention center on June 24, Manuel Marcelino Tzah played detective to connect with his 11-year-old daughter. He called home to Guatemala and found his daughter had left a working phone number with her mother.

“I started to cry when I heard her voice” after two months, he said. “She also cried. I told her, ‘Don’t worry, we will be together soon.’”

They were reunited at an airport in New York City on Tuesday.

In other cases, parents and children are finding creative ways to cope. A 15-year-old boy tells his 5-year-old brother that their separated mom was working and that’s the reason they’re apart, says the lawyer for the mother.

Adrian Velasquez persuaded a social worker to text him three pictures of his 8-year-old son. The images show Jason doing math homework inside a government facility in Texas and standing alongside smiling children of his age.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BEBETO MATTHEWS ?? Manuela Adriana, 11, left, sits with her father Manuel Marcelino Tzah inside their apartment hours after her release from immigrant detention Wednesday in Brooklyn. The Guatemalan asylum seekers were separated May 15 after they crossed the U.S. border...
AP PHOTO/BEBETO MATTHEWS Manuela Adriana, 11, left, sits with her father Manuel Marcelino Tzah inside their apartment hours after her release from immigrant detention Wednesday in Brooklyn. The Guatemalan asylum seekers were separated May 15 after they crossed the U.S. border...

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