Walker County Messenger

Common sense is missing element in immigratio­n policy

-

Strangely enough, it was Notre Dame’s beloved Father Theodore “Ted” Hesburgh who, many years ago, gave me invaluable insights into the problems we face today with both the brutish Salvadoran gangs in our big cities and with the immigrant children challengin­g our borders.

Down in El Salvador, in the heart of Central America, in 1972, a man of great integrity, Jose Napoleon Duarte, was elected the Christian Democrat president of the country. But a troglodyte alliance of the old Salvadoran landowners and the repressive military rather quickly decided it would be better to just kill Duarte to get back to business as usual.

Duarte, a big, rumpled, handsome chap of a man blessed with an active Catholic conscience, had studied at Notre Dame and was well known to its famous president. In desperatio­n, Duarte’s brother called Hesburgh.

Amazingly, the alarmed priest was able to contact the head of the CIA. In half an hour, a stranger called Hesburgh; it had been “arranged,” and Duarte would be badly beaten but thrown across the border to Guatemala, alive.

How on Earth had this been accomplish­ed -- and in half an hour? The stranger explained to Hesburgh:

“It was easy. We called the presidents of Venezuela and Panama and they called the general in charge in Salvador. They told him that if Duarte were killed, when it was HIS turn, no country in Latin America would grant him sanctuary.”

Father Hesburgh confided this story to me many years later, long after Duarte had become a very successful president. His story illustrate­s how to deal with the very different culture of Latin America.

Threaten the general with death? He would pose melodramat­ically and probably become a hero! But deny him a respectabl­e place to hide, and he would be a man disgraced and disinherit­ed. So let’s try to apply some of that common sense and wisdom to our problems with the MS-13 gang and the “unaccompan­ied minors.”

In El Salvador itself, with an overpopula­tion of 6.5 million in a tiny land where violence has been its history as people fight for space, the defense ministry estimates more than 50,000 people are involved with gangs, mostly MS-13. Murders average one per hour, and 95 percent of them are unsolved.

In the U.S., police now estimate there are 10,000 MS-13 members in 40 states, especially in Suffolk County on Long Island and in northern Virginia. Every day, The Washington Post contains the most gruesome and appalling stories, one after the other: young men -- or women -- beheaded in the woods, stabbed hundreds of times while gang members often gleefully celebrate. Satan worship is common.

Congressma­n Peter T. King, the respected New York Republican, recently said his prosperous suburban district on Long Island has become such a hotbed of MS-13 activity that authoritie­s are “right now digging for bodies within a mile of my house.”

But Americans have paid little attention to these horrible events because it is President Trump who has been shouting about MS-13, and anything he says has to be wrong. This is a grotesque mistake.

They started coming in 2012. Lone children -- from El Salvador, from Honduras, from Guatemala -- at the border. We labeled them “unaccompan­ied minors,” or UACs. By 2014, they were a torrent, and

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States