Family Moab

Family Moab
In Arches National Park

Friday, May 5, 2017

A Slight Upturn

The Denver area experienced a slight upturn in events and outlook for its undocumented community. First, Arturo Hernandez Garcia was released after several days in detention. In an unusual move, ICE officials released Arturo for 30 days so that he could attend the high school graduation of his 17-year-old daughter. His lawyers are working furiously to appeal the deportation order, while Arturo himself walked out of detention and asked to go to work. He said that his daughter was going to college in the fall, and he needed to pay for it.

Arturo's wife, Ana Sauzameda, prevailed upon him to take one day off to enjoy family and to support his friends in Sanctuary, Jeanette Vizguerra and Ingrid Encalada. Ingrid was in court on Wednesday in the hopes of finding her earlier attorneys negligent in their representation. She won that case, and it was the first step in amending a guilty plea from 2010 that makes staying in the U.S. impossible. Her eight-year-old son, Bryant, was there along with eighty well-wishers.  It was shocking to listen to testimony about her con-artist lawyers, who took $3,500 of her money and then failed to appear in court. The judge cited one of them - still missing - for contempt.

And later that same day, I had the opportunity to read my poem, Las Mujeres (The Women) at the launch party of the 2017 Progenitor, a local literary and art journal. I wrote the piece for my Regis Capstone and was both thrilled and extremely nervous to read it for an audience. Prior to reading, I sat with two writing group buddies who were also published in the issue, tracing "Lazy 8's" on my thigh and deep breathing.  "Lazy 8-ing" myself to some semblance of calm, I was privileged to share some of the experiences of women in detention.

If interested, here is the link: https://writerstudio.wixsite.com/progenitor2017/single-post/2017/04/10/Las-Mujeres-The-Women and here is the text:

Las Mujeres (The Women)

Serve them cold beans, government-required protein, save money for the shareholders. Commissary candy bars for those with cash, it won’t make them less hungry for the touch of a loved one, a breath of fresh air. Feed the hungry? The snarling guard says “get up you pigs, you won’t eat for free!”

Before prison the women trekked through dark deserts, siphoned poisons off old cow puddles. Hid from rabid coyotes, drug-runner guns, border patrol. Crossed the river, swam the ocean, climbed the wall: Ana, Angela, Alba, Brenda, Esmeralda, Jeanette, Josseline, Luz, My-wei, Toni, Wendy, Yanira, Zelda.

Can’t help them cross (crosses line the roads running north). No aiding and abetting, no drink for the thirsty.  Dying of dehydration and exposure, they tore off their clothes. Mothers daughters sisters lost, bones dissolved, dust to dust.

But some were found. Clothe the naked bodies in used briefs, holey tennis shoes. Crank air conditioning to blast through waffle weave shirts. Limit blankets, bolster bottom lines. Launder shapeless green-orange-red jumpsuits.

The corporation pays eighty cents for laundry, two days’ work buys a Snickers. That’s how we welcome the stranger from Bangladesh, China, Ghana, Honduras, Mexico. The women sleep eighty to a room in rows of bunk beds, strobe-lit by ascending moon, melting through window-bars.

We will not look after the sick, wash feet, wrap ankles, salve busted blisters. Care costs! Ignore respiratory illness, bleeding bruise, abscessed tooth. Treat depression and suicidal thoughts with truckloads of Zoloft and Seroquel. Prozac for depressed moms missing baby birthdays, bedtime stories.

Nobody asked them to clean our houses, watch our children, do our nails, cook our food. No English? No problem. Just sign on the dotted line. Erase your rights, ignore the wrong. Can’t make bail, can’t pay attorneys, can’t read the plea bargain? Take a return-trip-ticket.

Arrest them for climbing sharp mountains without a visa, for driving with dark skin. They can spend months in jail, recreate in the concrete walls of detention, play basketball on multi-ethnic teams, groan as the long shot rolls slowly around the metal hoop, wobbles on the edge, and finally... falls... out.

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