Young migrants living in limbo, awaiting Trump’s move

Juana Alejandro (R seated) and her sister Inés Alejandro (R standing) Undocumented immigrant students Juana Alejandro (L), 19, and her sister Inés Alejandro, 20, study in the library of Hostos Community College on December 16, 2016, in the Bronx borough of New York. The sisters arrived in New York City from Mexico with their mother 17 years ago. They fear deportation after US President-elect Donald Trump takes office on January 20. / AFP PHOTO / Laura BONILLA CAL

 

New York / AFP

The mother of Juana and Ines Alejandro took a deep breath, put on a brave face and handed her toddlers over to strangers at the Mexican border to be smuggled into the United States.
That was 17 years ago. For the mother, going back to the poverty of her village in Oaxaca in Mexico was out of the question. Smugglers helped her cross the border herself a few days later. She collected her daughters in Arizona and traveled to New York to reunite with her husband, whom she had not seen in two years.
Today, those daughters are 19 and 20 years old, study at a community college in New York and are scared to death that they might be deported after Donald Trump takes power next month.
“Being deported is something that does keep me awake at night,” Ines says. “How are we going to do it back home? It would mean starting all over again.”
The Alejandro family has lived in fear of being found out for years. That has meant going to the doctor only in emergencies, skipping school field trips and never returning to Mexico.
Juana and Ines have three siblings who were born in America and are therefore US citizens. But the older daughters and their parents remain in the country illegally.
The mother cooks Mexican food that an aunt sells outside a train station. The father helps, and washes dishes at a restaurant or works construction. They declined to be named for this story.
But Juana and Ines’s luck changed in 2013 when the United States started implementing a program to give young people like them renewable two-year residence and work permits.
It is called DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, for people who were brought to the United States as children and do not have papers. The idea is that they should not be punished with deportation for something in which they had no say.
“DACA has opened a lot of doors for me. I feel more secure about saying I am undocumented,” says Juana, who studies business administration. “It has removed many worries.” During his presidential campaign, Trump insulted Mexicans by saying some Mexican immigrants were rapists and drug dealers. He also pledged to end the DACA program immediately. But he has changed his tune since then. “They got brought here at a very young age. They’ve worked here. They’ve gone to school here. Some were good students. Some have wonderful jobs,” Trump told Time magazine after his election. “And they’re in never-never land because they don’t know what’s going to happen.”
“We’re going to work something out that’s going to make people happy and proud,” he said. A group of Democratic and Republican senators this month presented a bill that would protect such young people from deportation for three years and allow them to work if Trump scraps the DACA program.

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