Imagine being held in a small cement room with dozens of other kids. The toilet is in the corner, with no door for privacy or soap to wash your hands. Your clothes are dirty, and you can’t remember the last time you showered. Your meals are the same every day: instant oatmeal, soup, and microwaved burritos. There are only a few beds, so at night you share a thin mat on the floor with other children. You’re exhausted, but it’s hard to sleep. The lights are always on, and all around you, kids sob for relatives they haven’t seen in days or even weeks. You try not to think about your mamá and papá, but sometimes you end up crying too.
This might sound like a scene from a movie, but for roughly a year and a half, it has been a reality for thousands of immigrant children in the United States. Mostly from Central America, they came to the U.S. illegally with their families, seeking safety and better lives.
Mateo (not his real name), age 12, is one of them. He fled to the U.S. from Guatemala this past summer with his uncle, who was raising him and his 4-year-old brother. “We lived in a dangerous neighborhood filled with gangs and drug dealers,” Mateo said (see note, below).
Kids like Mateo hope reaching the U.S. will mean a safe place to live and steady jobs for the adults who care for them. But as soon as Mateo’s family got here, U.S. Border Patrol officials took his uncle away. Then they brought Mateo and his brother to a place where young immigrants are held, a youth detention center.
Mateo’s story isn’t unique. Since April 2018, the U.S. government has separated scores of young people from their parents, grandparents, aunts, or uncles after the families crossed into this country. Teens, children, and toddlers have been placed in detention centers with little or no contact with their relatives. Nearly two weeks after Mateo was taken from his uncle, they still had not been reunited. “I do not know where he is,” the boy said.