Sometimes an
image captures the heart of a nation by putting a face on a human crisis. The one of Óscar Alberto Martínez Ramírez and
his 2-year-old daughter Valeria lying face down in the Rio Grande after
drowning was powerful. Their family had
been turned away from crossing the border and decided to take their chances and
swim across the river. They were not
successful.
Why did this
picture seize our attention? Is it
because Valeria’s’ tiny body is tucked inside her father’s shirt and we can vividly
see her clinging to him as they drowned?
Or is it because we know if they had made it across safely, the two would
have been separated anyway? Or is it
because every parent understands the desperation it took for a father to swim
across a swirling river while carrying his 2-year-old daughter on his
back?
After
staring at this image long enough, this girl becomes mine. And if circumstances had been different, Valeria
could belong to any one of us. Immigrants
arriving at the Southern U.S. border have the right to request asylum without
being criminalized or separated from their children. And I have lost my patience with those people
who are trying to justify treating migrant children like animals. It is
intolerable to deprive a child of food, shelter and sanitation.
Pediatricians
and other health personnel must be allowed access to the border facilities
holding migrant children. Border patrol
officials must be trained to care for ill or injured children while in detention
facilities. In addition, we must change
the way America looks at those seeking asylum in this country. And, in my opinion, American mothers, are the
ones to do it.
Language has
the power to shape public opinion. Labeling immigrants as “illegals,” serves to
dehumanize them and justify holding them in bondage. Propaganda can be very persuasive. The language used in reference to immigration
has been weaponized to the extent that our nation has been deaf to the cries of
children separated from their mothers.
Our nation
has been here before. History is filled
with propaganda-driven cruelty against ethnic or racial groups. Slave owners considered
slaves to be personal property and thought nothing of tearing apart families. Our nation was indifferent to the forced
incarceration of Japanese Americans, some of whom endured family separation as
well.
Unfortunately,
this time, we are brutalizing children who are unable to protect themselves.
Children are
not small adults. They have unique
physical, emotional and medical needs.
Children cannot reach their potential living in deplorable conditions. Children need healthy food. Children need soap and toothbrushes. Children need to feel safe, have adequate
sleep, and time to play.
Despite the
fact that President Trump says the conditions are acceptable, make no mistake,
children are being harmed at our southern border. Dr. Sara Goza, the current president of the
American Academy of Pediatrics, recently toured two border facilities. She said, "the first thing that hit me
when we walked in the door was the smell. It was the smell of sweat, urine and
feces.” She continued, "No amount
of time spent in these facilities is safe for children."
Immigrants
are first and foremost, human beings.
Migrant children are no different than our own children. Outbreaks of chicken pox, scabies, and
shingles will go on to become measles and meningitis if we do nothing. Teams of pediatricians, nurses, social
workers, psychologists, and other support staff—who have passed background
checks—should immediately be given access to examine every child and provide
necessary medical care in every single detention center in the country holding
children under the age of 18.
Border
patrol officials have no training or expertise in caring for young children.
They have been providing one lice comb for children to comb through each
other’s’ hair, yet in the absence of hot water or rubbing alcohol to sterilize
the comb between uses, combating lice is impossible. As a mother to four
children, I cannot tolerate the idea of any child being held in such deplorable
conditions.
The
government is just as incapable of managing the immigration crisis as they are
at fixing our healthcare system.
Everyday Americans must do it. Every
time we turn away from the preventable suffering of a child, we lose a piece of
our humanity.
Do not turn
away. The lives of too many children are
at stake.
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