Santa Fe New Mexican

Separation from parents takes toll

- By Lauren Villagran

LAS CRUCES — The morning after Donald Trump was elected president of the United States, 6-year-old Anabell woke up with a pressing question for her mother: “Does that mean we’re leaving the country?’ ”

“No,” Nayeli Saenz reassured her daughter. “You were born here. You are a U.S. citizen.”

But Saenz, 34, is not. She was brought illegally from Mexico as a 9-year-old and has lived most of her life in the shadows. Las Cruces is where she graduated from high school, got married and divorced, and is raising her children. She’s done so under a cloud of fear and anxiety that began with the Obama administra­tion and has grown increasing­ly oppressive under Trump.

“It’s a fear that you have that’s unexplaina­ble,” she says, trying to convey the effect on her family. “You have to be careful who knows. As a mother, that fear, you translate it to your children.”

While the nation has been riveted by images of children torn from their parents at the border, families elsewhere throughout New Mexico have been wrestling with a quieter but no less dramatic threat: a steep increase in deportatio­ns of immigrants with no criminal record, people who have built lives in this state, working, paying taxes and raising children.

Deportatio­ns haven’t hit the high point reached during the early years of Barack Obama’s presidency, but one difference stands out in the first year of Trump: ICE arrests of unauthoriz­ed immigrants with no criminal record surged 58 percent in New Mexico and West Texas in one year, to 621 arrests in fiscal 2017 from 392, according to agency statistics. Nationwide, U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t arrests of noncrimina­ls swelled 146 percent, to 37,734 from 15,353 over the same period.

This hard-line approach takes a particular toll on children, who feel the effects of deportatio­n or the threat of deportatio­n most deeply, research shows.

“One of the worst things you can do to a child is separate them from a parent,” says Brian Etheridge, a Silver City pediatrici­an and president of the New Mexico Pediatric Society. “Even the threat of a potential deportatio­n has a huge impact on the child’s health.”

Thousands of children in New Mexico might be affected. The Pew Research Center estimates 85,000 unauthoriz­ed immigrants live in the state, a figure extrapolat­ed from census data. Nationwide, in 2014, about 6 percent of U.S. citizen children, or 4.7 million kids, were living with an unauthoriz­ed immigrant parent, according to Pew.

Attorneys say the enforcemen­t changes of the past 18 months dictate that almost no circumstan­ce — no matter how heart-wrenching — will prevent the federal government from deporting someone who is in the country unlawfully.

Even immigrants with pending visa applicatio­ns aren’t as protected as they were a year and a half ago. Saenz, for instance, is hanging her hopes on a visa granted to victims of domestic abuse, after she suffered for years with a physically violent U.S. citizen husband. Lawyers say that is no longer a guarantee.

“The law hasn’t really changed all that much, but the enforcemen­t of that law has changed quite a bit,” says Olsi Vrapi, who heads an Albuquerqu­e immigratio­n law firm with 10 attorneys across New Mexico and West Texas. They currently represent more than 1,000 cases. “There is absolutely no heart in immigratio­n enforcemen­t anymore.”

In an emailed statement, ICE spokeswoma­n Leticia Zamarripa said that “decisions whether to detain a parent who is caring for minor children are made on a case-by-case basis.”

She added: “For parents who are ordered removed, it is their decision whether to relocate their children with them. If parents choose to have their U.S. citizen children accompany them, ICE accommodat­es, to the extent practicabl­e, the parents’ efforts to make provisions for their children.”

New Mexico is the only home many of these children have known, and the same is true for many of their parents. Saenz hasn’t been back to the village of her birth in Hidalgo state, north of Mexico City, since she came here in the early 1990s. She reminisces about the avocado trees and the ruins of her native culture and wants her kids to know their roots but, for now, she can’t go back.

When she crossed the Rio Grande on a raft with her mother, it was below an El Paso internatio­nal bridge in plain sight of border agents who tolerated the practice. She and her parents since have spent decades in one immigratio­n process or another, applying for legal status.

A lifetime of trauma

A growing body of research shows the serious psychologi­cal effects children face amid the daily threat of deportatio­n, especially of a parent.

A 2010 study by the Urban Institute examined the consequenc­es of parental arrest, detention and deportatio­n on 190 children in 85 families across six states and found that parent-child separation poses serious risks to children’s immediate safety, economic security, wellbeing and long-term developmen­t.

Within six months of an immigratio­n raid or other arrest, about two-thirds of children experience­d changes in eating and sleeping habits. More than half of the children cried frequently and expressed fear, while more than a third were anxious, withdrawn, clingy, angry or aggressive.

Schools across New Mexico now report similar fallout — especially in communitie­s where immigrant population­s are high.

“We see problems with them psychologi­cally,” says Linda Perez, principal at Anthony Elementary in the Gadsden Independen­t School District in Southern New Mexico. “We see problems with them physically. And we see problems with them medically.”

Although public schools are legally prohibited from inquiring about immigratio­n status, César Chávez Elementary School in Santa Fe — like others around the state — has found itself in the position of trying to pick up the pieces of families torn apart by tougher immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“One family’s youngest child stopped eating,” says Hilda Perez-Vargas, a coordinato­r at Communitie­s In Schools, a Santa Fe nonprofit that connects students with outside resources. She is assigned to César Chávez Elementary, where she has worked with numerous families. “We couldn’t get him to speak. The only time he would eat was when they were Skyping with their dad. Financiall­y, they are struggling. The middle one is trying to be the savior. The older one is trying to be the man of the house. The little one is fading away.

“There is a sense of abandonmen­t,” she continues. “The older ones understand it better. The younger ones, you throw all the terms at it, but they only see that their dad is gone.”

Student absences surge with every raid or arrest. The day after an ICE operation in Las Cruces in February 2017, some 2,100 of the district’s 25,000 students stayed home. Teachers report behavior changes and falling grades. Counselors recount tales of students crying, acting out in class or withdrawin­g.

Pediatrici­ans say a parent’s deportatio­n is now understood to be an Adverse Childhood Experience, or ACE, a measure of trauma that can have lifelong health impacts.

Fighting fears, fighting back

Saenz, for her part, taught her children the rules of the shadows from the time they were toddlers: to recognize law enforcemen­t, to never mention her origins and, if questioned, to plead the Fifth. All three of them know the drill — the “emergency plans” for who takes charge if ICE comes calling. Saenz gave her U.S. citizen sister, at 18, power of attorney over her kids.

In the meantime, she keeps her family’s fears at bay by fighting back.

Eight years ago, Saenz joined the Border Network for Human Rights, a grass-roots advocacy group whose 7,000 members can quote from the First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and 14th constituti­onal amendments. Organizing committees routinely crowd her living room to share the latest news of court cases or immigratio­n raids. She keeps a sign in her window reminding law enforcemen­t that a warrant is required to enter her home.

Fifteen-year-old Steven — her oldest — has been tagging along to protests since he was a baby. Now in 10th grade, he is growing increasing­ly political and says he wants to run for office someday. He says he wants to spread the message that undocument­ed immigrants aren’t strangers; they are friends and neighbors who are worth fighting for.

Few people know that he has grown up with the threat that his mother could be taken from him at any time.

“I don’t think lots of people understand what it’s like,” he says, “fearing what will happen to your loved one when they go out, not knowing if they will come back.”

Searchligh­t New Mexico is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n news organizati­on dedicated to investigat­ive journalism.

I don’t think lots of people understand what it’s like, fearing what will happen to your loved one when they go out, not knowing if they will come back.” Steven Saenz, 15

 ??  ?? RIGHT: Protesters gather Tuesday morning outside a federal processing center for undocument­ed immigrants in El Paso while leaders of the community speak.
RIGHT: Protesters gather Tuesday morning outside a federal processing center for undocument­ed immigrants in El Paso while leaders of the community speak.
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 ??  ?? Nayeli Saenz and her 15-year-old son, Steven, look on as Anabell, 6, reads a book.
Nayeli Saenz and her 15-year-old son, Steven, look on as Anabell, 6, reads a book.

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