Los Angeles Times

Life as a ‘Dreamer’ grows uncertain

For a Times journalist brought here at age 2, a once-distant threat becomes real again

- BRIAN DE LOS SANTOS brian.delossanto­s@latimes.com Twitter: @bdelossant­os1

My parents don’t remember exactly when they told me. But I do.

I was 8 or 9 years old. My teacher gave me a pamphlet about a school trip to Washington, D.C.

At dinner that night in my family’s Mid-City apartment, I told my parents I really wanted to go and experience my nation’s capital. At first, my mother danced around the request, focusing on how much it would cost. But eventually, she grew more serious. “No tienes un ID para viajar, mijo.”

“You don’t have an ID to travel, son.”

I knew something was off, but I wasn’t exactly sure what.

I considered myself American, just like any other kid in my class. I learned U.S. history, bopped along to Snoop Dogg — and, of course, adored a Happy Meal. My parents had often told me I was born in Veracruz, Mexico. But until that night, I’d never given much thought to what that meant.

Knowing that I was in this country without permission from the government changed the way I lived my life — but I have tried not to let it limit me. At times, it has made me cautious and reserved; at other times, brave and ambitious. It’s a basic fact, a part of who I am.

The last few years have been marked by highs and lows — when President Obama gave me and other “Dreamers” work permits, when President Trump vowed to take them away and crack down on illegal immigratio­n. What in recent years seemed like a distant threat — losing my job, being sent back to a country I left when I was a toddler — suddenly feels all too real again.

My dad left Mexico first, heading north in hopes of providing a better life for my family. Months later, when I was 2, my mom and I followed. We were reunited around Christmas in 1992.

That night almost 20 years ago when I brought up the class trip, my parents were forced to have the talk with me — the “no tienes

papeles” talk. They told me to stay away from trouble, always obey authoritie­s, be extra careful around police and officials. I wouldn’t be able to get a driver’s license, might not get a job after high school, couldn’t go visit Mexico, couldn’t take that school trip. “Échale ganas en la escuela y Dios provera,” my

mother said. “Work hard in school and God will provide.”

That was my takeaway from the conversati­on. And I ran with it.

In 2012, I graduated from Cal State Northridge.

Using my Mexican passport, I got on a plane and headed at long last to Washington.

I was there for a journalism fellowship program, reporting on national politics that affected Latinos.

One morning that June, I woke up to a flurry of news and messages about a possible announceme­nt that could change things for immigrants like me.

I had still been in college in 2010, when the Dream Act almost passed the Senate but didn’t. I had often felt like people were playing politics with my future.

But not on that day, a day I’ll never forget.

That day in the Rose Garden, President Obama spoke about people like me.

“They are Americans in their heart, in their minds, in every single way but one: on paper,” he said.

The Department of Homeland Security, he said, would immediatel­y take steps to “lift the shadow of deportatio­n from these young people.” We would be able to get work permits and driver’s licenses.

I would finally have a shot at a better future here.

The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, meant I could continue to pursue journalism, to keep telling stories about those like me: immigrant, Latino and LGBTQ.

Since obtaining my work permit I’ve worked at NPR, Marketplac­e, local radio stations and now my hometown paper, the Los Angeles Times. This brown kid from Mexico always dreamed of working at The Times, the paper I picked up to brush up on the news and complete my middle school current-events assignment­s.

Now, I am the one helping prepare that news: the San Bernardino terrorist attack, the latest Trump coverage, this week’s mass shooting in Las Vegas.

DACA has allowed me to do this.

This September, another flurry of tweets and news alerts told me the Trump administra­tion had announced it was ending DACA. I had known it was coming, just not when and how.

It left me as scared, confused and anxious as I had been all those years ago, when my parents broke the news at the dinner table.

Friends and colleagues texted me love letters and pledged their support that day. Some still continue to do so. Many ask one thing: What are you going to do? I tell them honestly, I don’t know.

Thursday is the last day the Department of Homeland Security will accept applicatio­ns for two-year DACA renewals, unless the president changes his mind or Congress acts to extend the program. I am one of 800,000 people — nurses, students, journalist­s — who benefit from the program.

My paperwork’s been filed. For now, I wait and watch — and follow the old advice that has served me well:

“Échale ganas y Dios provera.”

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals meant I could continue to pursue journalism, to keep telling stories about those like me: immigrant, Latino and LGBTQ.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS march to Echo Park last month in support of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. The Trump administra­tion’s move to end the program means Thursday is the last day to submit DACA renewals.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS march to Echo Park last month in support of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. The Trump administra­tion’s move to end the program means Thursday is the last day to submit DACA renewals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States