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The New York Times
June 18, 2012
American
Children, Now Struggling to Adjust to Life in Mexico
by
Damien Cave
IZÚCAR
DE MATAMOROS, Mexico Jeffrey Isidoro sat near the door
of his fifth-grade classroom here in central Mexico, staring
outside through designer glasses that, like his Nike sneakers
and Nike backpack, signaled a life lived almost entirely in
the United States. His parents are at home in Mexico. Jeffrey
is lost.
When
his teacher asked in Spanish how dolphins communicate, a boy
next to him reached over to underline the right answer. When
it was Jeffreys turn to read, his classmates laughed and
shouted en inglés, en inglés
causing Jeffrey to blush.
Houston
is home, Jeffrey said during recess, in English. The
houses and stuff here, its all a little strange. I feel,
like, uncomfortable.
Never
before has Mexico seen so many American Jeffreys, Jennifers
and Aidens in its classrooms. The wave of deportations in the
past few years, along with tougher state laws and persistent
unemployment, have all created a mass exodus of Mexican parents
who are leaving with their American sons and daughters.
In
all, 1.4 million Mexicans including about 300,000 children
born in the United States moved to Mexico between 2005
and 2010, according to Mexican census figures. That is roughly
double the rate of southbound migration from 1995 to 2000, and
new government data published this month suggest that the flow
is not diminishing. The result is an entire generation of children
who blur the line between Mexican and American.
Its
really a new phenomenon, said Víctor Zúñiga,
a sociologist at the University of Monterrey, in Nuevo León
State, which borders Texas. Its the first time in
the relationship between Mexico and the United States that we
have a generation of young people sharing both societies during
the early years of their lives.
Critics
of immigration have mostly welcomed the mass departure, but
demographers and educators worry that far too many American
children are being sent to schools in Mexico that are not equipped
to integrate them. And because research shows that most of these
children plan to return to the United States, some argue that
what is Mexicos challenge today will be an American problem
tomorrow, with a new class of emerging immigrants: young adults
with limited skills, troubled childhoods and the full rights
of American citizenship.
These
kinds of changes are really traumatic for kids, said Marta
Tienda, a sociologist at Princeton who was born in Texas to
Mexican migrant laborers. Its going to stick with
them.
Jeffreys
situation is increasingly common. His father, Tomás Isidoro,
39, a carpenter, was one of the 46,486 immigrants deported in
the first half of 2011 who said they had American children,
according to a report by Immigration and Customs Enforcement
to Congress. That is eight times the half-year average for such
removals from 1998 to 2007.
Mr.
Isidoro, wearing a Dallas Cowboys hat in his parents kitchen,
said he was still angry that his 25 years of work in the United
States meant nothing; that being caught with a broken taillight
on his vehicle and without immigration papers meant more than
having two American sons Jeffrey, 10, and his brother,
Tommy Jefferson, 2, who was named after the familys favorite
president.
As
for President Obama, Mr. Isidoro uttered an expletive. There
are all these drug addicts, drug dealers, people who do nothing
in the United States, and youre going to kick people like
me out, he said. Why?
White
House officials have said that under a new policy focused on
criminals, fewer parents of American children are being deported
for minor offenses. On Friday, the Obama administration also
announced that hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants who
came to United States as children would be allowed to stay without
fear of deportation. The policy, however, does not grant legal
status, and because nearly half of the countrys 10.2 million
illegal immigrant adults have children, experts say that inevitably
more families will be divided especially if deportations
over all hold steady around 400,000 a year.
But
for Jeffrey, the impact of his fathers removal in June
last year was immediate. His grades dipped. His mother, Leivi
Rodríguez, 32, worried that he had become more distant,
from both his friends and his studies. Almost every day, Jeffrey
told her he wanted to see his father.
So
six months after her husbands deportation, she sent Jeffrey
to live with his father in Mexico, and she followed with Tommy
a few months later. It was December when he arrived here in
a hill town south of Mexico City, surrounded by fields of swaying
sugar cane. On Jeffreys first night, he noticed something
strange in his bed. Dad, whats that? he asked.
A
scorpion, his father said.
School
here presented new challenges, as well. Jeffrey went hungry
at first because neither he nor his father realized that without
a cafeteria, students relied on their parents to bring them
food at recess.
In
class, Jeffreys level of confusion rises and falls. His
teacher said she struggled to keep him from daydreaming. His
body is here, but his mind who knows where it is,
she said.
Houston
that is where Jeffreys thoughts typically drift.
There, he had friends, McDonalds, the zoo. It is where
he lingered at the library at Gleason Elementary to catch up
on his favorite series of books, Diary of a Wimpy Kid.
There, his school had a playground; here, there is just a concrete
slab. There, computers were common; here, there are none.
It
was just better, Jeffrey said.
The
educational disparities between Mexico and the United States
are not always so stark. At the elementary level, some of Mexicos
schools are on par with, or even stronger than, the overcrowded,
underfinanced American schools that serve many immigrant children,
education experts say.
But
Mexican schools lag when it comes to secondary education. In
many areas of Mexico, especially places where the tradition
of migration is not as well established, Mexicos educational
bureaucracy can make life difficult for new arrivals like Jeffrey.
It is not uncommon for American students to be barred from enrollment
for a year or more because they lack proper documents.
The
established rules for registration dont need to be so
severe, said Armando Reynoso Carrillo, a state legislator
from Malinalco, a rural area in Mexico State where dozens of
American children have arrived in recent years.
The
problems extend beyond registration. Mexicans have a long history
of greeting returnees with skepticism for abandoning
Mexico, or because they resent the United States, or view those
who moved there as materialistic, culturally out of touch and
arrogant. The prejudice often extends to their children.
Graciela
Treviño González said that when she returned to
Malinalco three years ago, after more than a decade in California,
she could not get her American son onto a soccer team because
the coaches refused to accept him without Mexican identification.
He felt rejected by everyone, she said. The
kids called him leche, gringo
it was awful. Leche means milk and gringo can range from
a neutral reference to a foreigner to a slur.
Here
in the central state of Puebla, Mexican children are especially
likely to see transnational students as different, according
to surveys by Mr. Zúñiga, the sociologist. Some
have come to Mexico because of deportations. Others arrived
because relatives were sick or without work.
But
regardless of the cause, Mexican students tend to see their
American-educated colleagues as strangers. Jeffreys experience
is typical: He is friendly and quick to open up in English,
but quieter at school, where Spanish is the only language one
hears.
At
one point this spring, as Jeffrey sat at the edge of the playground,
a larger boy approached from behind and asked if he was from
Florida or Houston. When Jeffrey pulled away because the boy
had leaned into him, the bigger boy seemed surprised. Are
you mad? he asked.
Later,
other boys tested Jeffrey on his English, asking him in Spanish
to translate various body parts.
How
do you say foot? one asked. Finger?
Eye?
Jeffrey
provided one-word answers without enthusiasm. At home, a three-room
concrete box with furniture hauled from Houston, he said that
many of the children called him Four Eyes. He said he was starting
to feel more comfortable academically and socially, but even
in a school with 11 other children born or educated in the United
States (out of 296) he is still a foreigner. Sometimes, he confuses
the Mexican pledge of allegiance with the American version.
Ms.
Tienda, at Princeton, said children of Jeffreys age were
more likely to struggle with such a difficult transition. This
is the age where they start to be aware of each others
differences, she said. Theyre preadolescents
and their identity is being crystallized.
She
added that how these students fared over the long term will
probably vary widely. Some will make the transition easily while
others will suffer setback after setback. It will depend on
their language skills, school and family dynamics.
Jeffrey,
like many other children whose parents have moved them to a
country they do not know, seems to be teetering between catching
up to his classmates and falling further behind. His parents
are struggling to find work and keep their marriage together.
Jeffrey, in quieter moments, said he was just trying to endure
until he could go home.
I
dream, like, Im sleeping in the United States, he
said. But when I wake up, Im in Mexico.
Shaul
Schwarz contributed reporting.
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