The Daily - Waiting for the Immigration Raids
Episode Date: July 15, 2019This past weekend, immigration officials were scheduled to begin arresting and deporting thousands of undocumented immigrants who had been ordered to leave the United States but had remained. On Frida...y evening, we spoke to one woman who feared she was on the list. Guest: Herminia, an undocumented immigrant who has been living in the United States with her husband and children for more than a decade. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Background reading:A small number of raids targeting recently arrived undocumented migrant parents and their children took place over the weekend. More raids are expected to follow throughout the week.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today. This past weekend, immigration officials were scheduled to begin arresting and deporting
thousands of undocumented immigrants who had been ordered to leave the United States,
but had remained anyway. On Friday evening, we spoke to one woman who feared she was on the list.
It's Monday, July 15th.
Hello?
Hi, is this Herminia?
Yes, I am.
Hey, it's Michael Barbaro from the New York Times.
Hi, Michael, can you hear me good?
I can hear you very well.
Okay, good.
Thank you so much for making time for us.
You're very welcome.
The only thing I'm going to say is that, you know, my English is not perfect, but I'm going to try my best.
Am I right that we're going to be calling you Herminia in this interview?
But that's not your real name?
No.
I don't want to be identified.
Got it.
And where am I reaching you right now? It's early in the evening, around 7 o'clock on Friday. You're just getting home?
Yes, you know, I'm supposed to be home since like 6.20, but I just finished because I was washing dishes and I just finished. So that's why, you know, I'm stealing my car, driving, but I'm going to park.
When you say you were doing dishes, what is the work that you're describing? Oh, I'm a housekeeper and a nanny.
I take care of a three-year-old little boy, and I am the housekeeper. So, you know, making sure
that everything is clean in the kitchen before I leave. Because I'm supposed to go tomorrow,
but I explained to my boss that, you know, I'm not feeling comfortable like going out tomorrow. So, you know, I'd rather stay home to protect myself and my family.
Herminia, let's talk a little bit about how you came to be in the situation that we're going to
be talking about. Where exactly are you from? Tell me about where you came from and what it was like to grow up there.
I'm from Nicaragua.
I came to this country when I was 21 years old.
And I came because I have a daughter.
At that time, she was six years old.
And I used to have some problems with people that belonged to, you know, the Sandinistas party.
They run the government and everything.
So it was hard for me to get a job,
especially when these people know that you are not a fan,
you know, of that party.
Let me make sure I understand.
It sounds like you had attracted some kind of negative attention
from the government in Nicaragua. Is that right?
Yes, because, you know, it's not like here. You can be a Democrat, you can be a Republican,
and you have a job. You know, your party is not a big deal. But in my country, it doesn't work
that way. So I was at home taking care of my daughter. My husband was working in a cruise line, but when he was working in this
cruise line, they explained to him that they were not going to hire him anymore because they were
selling the chips. So, you know, that worried me a lot because I said, okay, what am I going to do now?
On his way to Nicaragua, he came to Miami to visit his family,
his relatives he had here.
And, you know, I had to make the decision
to tell him, okay, you know what?
You're going to have to stay in USA.
You're going to have to stay there
and I'm going to try to, you know, to go.
I used to have my visa,
so I didn't see any problem for me to travel.
And I came.
I came with my six-year-old daughter because at that time she didn't have her passport ready.
So she stayed with my mother-in-law.
And I decided to come.
I decided to come for a better future for her.
Okay, let me just make sure I understand.
So your husband had been working for a cruise company, but then he lost his job,
and he was headed back to Nicaragua to be with you.
But then you decided that instead he should stay in Miami, and that you would try to join him there.
Yes, exactly.
And both you and your husband are undocumented. Yes. So we went
to a lawyer and he explained to us that you have problems in your country, so we can ask for asylum.
So we request the asylum and we wait. We got the working permit, we were working.
I start working in a home nurse.
Okay.
HHA, home health aid.
And I start working taking care of elderly.
What do you remember about those early days in the U.S.? What were your first impressions of this country?
You know, something that caught me the attention is when I went to the grocery store the first time, you can, you know, you take your stuff, everything you're going to buy, you put it in the cart and then you go and pay.
You don't see that in my city.
You go to this store and then it's a big bar in front of you and you ask for this stuff, they give it to you and you pay.
But here it's like, you know, you even sometimes you get something, you open it they give it to you and you pay but here it's like you know you
even sometimes you get something you open you eat it and then you pay right so I said wow I got
impressed when I saw that because I said don't people take stuff and steal it you know take it
out and you know just don't pay for it and they run away and my husband explained me no you know here is
different and oh my god this is beautiful how the mailmen come and get stuff right in front of your
door and nobody touch it and I was like see the chairs outside the you know the houses or
decorations for Christmas in my country that will not stay for two hours.
You see?
That's a big difference.
And I thought, wow, you know,
this is a beautiful country.
What year was that?
That year was, let me remember,
from 20, no, 2002 to 2006.
It was the last year I had my working permit.
At the end of the year in 2006, I was supposed to renew my working permit,
but they sent me a letter that they cannot renew my working permit.
So after that, I received a letter from immigration with the asylum case
that it was denied. It was one page telling me
that your case was denied by the judge. Nothing else. Just my case was denied. So that's why I
didn't get the chance to get my working permit again. So these two things are connected,
not getting a work permit and not getting asylum. They're linked. Yes, because they had the answer from the judge saying that my
asylum was denied. So they had decided that the case that you were making, the reason that you
didn't want to go back to Nicaragua was not sufficient for asylum. Yes. I remember they sent me a big folder of things about my country,
saying that my country has democracy now. And it's true, because by that time,
the Ortega's wasn't in the power. So I said, OK, you know, what can I do? There was no job for me.
I have a daughter. You know, I need to do something different. I need to get a better future for her.
So you seem to be sort of acknowledging that maybe your asylum case was not that strong, but that you really didn't want to go, no, no, this is not a place to raise my daughter.
So 2006, I appealed, but the judge denied again.
I remember Bush, President Bush was talking about immigration reform.
And my family used to say to me, don't leave, don't, you know, don't plan to go back to Nicaragua because I think it's going to get better here.
You're going to have your opportunity to fix your papers.
I stay and I say, OK, OK, as long as I don't have a deportation order, I'm OK.
What I did in the middle of I was trying to get my asylum, I had the chance to bring my daughter through the airport also.
Through the airport?
Yes.
So she came as a tourist, and I said, you're going to stay, Mama.
You're going to stay. You're not going back.
We are here, and we're going to try to do everything that is possible so we can stay here in this country.
So she just flew to the U.S. as if she was visiting.
Yes.
On a vacation and you kind of snuck her in.
Yes. After four years I came, she came.
And she never left.
She never left.
So 2010 I went to my lawyer.
It was him and his wife.
So she asked me, you know, how's everything?
And I said, well, you know, just waiting for something to come out.
It was Obama in the power at that time.
Obama was president.
Yes.
And she said to me, you know, don't lose the faith because, you know, this president is
good and he's going to try to help you out.
And I said, you know what?
I'm OK as long as I don't have a deportation order.
So she said to me, yes, you have a deportation order.
And I said, no, I don't have any.
I said, thank God, you know, I don't have any.
And she said, so there she explained to me, once a judge denies a case, automatically it's a deportation order.
case automatically is a deportation order.
So she is telling you that the denial of your asylum years earlier, that had been the deportation order.
Yeah, that's what she explained.
So she called this toll-free phone from Homeland Security, where you put your alien number,
and she put my alien number, and I heard the message that said, the judge denied the case for this person, you know, say my name and make the order of removal.
And she said, you see, you have a deportation order.
Oh, my God.
When she said that to me, everything fell apart.
My face was so warm.
She said, are you OK?
And I said, oh, my God, I can't believe this.
What? No, no, it's
impossible. I said, why I have a deportation order and nobody tell me nothing. Nobody's saying
anything to me. So she said, no, they, they not always do that, but you have a deportation order.
So be careful. Try not to stay in a place for many years. She gave me some advice.
place for many years. She gave me some advice. I came off from that office and I sat down and I told my husband, you know, we need to talk. And I explained to him what happened to me.
And I say, if it happened to me, it's the same with you. So I said to him, you know,
what are we going to do? At that time, he was working in construction and I started working
as a housekeeper because I didn't have, you know, my working permit anymore. And we sold the car
we had. Why? Because it was the beginning of being alive without a driver license,
being alive without a paper that showed me that I was legal in the country.
We try not to go out.
You know, usually in the weekends we used to go out.
I was scared.
We want to get pulled over by, you know, by the police.
And I don't know what the police is going to do with us.
And just try to stay away from anything that can put you in a bad position.
And how many people like you did you know? How many of your friends and the people you work with
are also undocumented? Or did you feel very alone?
At the beginning, yes, I thought I was the only one. But then when people start telling me stories,
people that were citizens already,
and say, you know what, I've been in this country for 15 years without papers.
And then when I start talking to people that maybe I never in my life,
I would think they were undocumented, they say to me, you know what,
don't say anything, but I don't have papers.
Many people, many people.
I have a friend from Argentina.
She's a lady.
She's a white lady, beautiful.
She always dress up pretty.
And one day, you know, when we have like the trust to talk about this, she said to me, I have been in this country for 17 years and I don't have papers.
And I was like, oh, okay. Well, you know, it's something that, believe it or not,
help you a lot because it's okay. I'm not, I'm not alone in this. I am not alone. So I said,
okay, you know what? I'm going to stay here. I'm going to try to live my life. I'm going to try to work, you know, feed my family and try to be calm. And until one day we see the light. But I never feel afraid. I
never feel the fear that I feel now because the fear is there every single day. Trump, he make sure to remind you that he's coming for you,
he's going to catch you, he's going to send you back home.
You know, it's something that, thank God,
that I don't get mental illness because I would be crazy by now.
Well, let's talk about this.
In what form do you hear that message every day
that the president is coming for you?
Sometimes I cry because, you know, it's not nice to hear somebody telling you every day,
you are this, you are this, you, you know, you, you, you, like, oh my God, what I did bad. Just staying in a country where I want to feel safe.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Right now, I'm in my car talking to you.
And I know when I get through that door, I have to turn off that light and stay in my room.
Why?
You mean once you get home tonight,
you need to lock the door and turn off the light,
and you won't go back outside?
You can't go back outside,
because this weekend, there will be those raids.
Yes.
We'll be right back.
What have the last few days been like for you since you found out that these raids were coming?
The first time, I was okay.
I'm not going to lie.
That was a Thursday.
I was okay.
On Friday, I was cleaning my bathroom when I received the first call asking me,
are you okay?
You know, are you prepared?
And they say, okay, look, I don't want to scare you, but you need to be careful because they are looking for people that have deportation order.
So people you know are calling you and saying, we hear there are raids coming.
Yeah. But when I received the second call, I realized, okay, this is serious.
Okay. Hello. Come back to earth.
It's happening.
So that was a week ago and the raids were in fact rescheduled for this weekend. That's
our understanding and yours too. So you are now sitting in your car. It's 8 p.m. on Friday
night. Once you go inside, after we finish talking,
you probably won't come back out
all weekend.
Is that right?
Yes.
We decide to stay home,
but with rules.
Nobody's going to open the door.
Nobody.
I have a note,
a big note in front of my door
that says,
do not open the door.
Don't answer. So when somebody comes to knock on my doors, you know, that say, do not open the door, don't answer.
So when somebody comes to knock on my door, we have to go to my daughter's room
to check through the window in her room to see who is knocking on the door before open.
The window is down, you know, it's closed.
The light in the living room is going to be off.
The TV is going to be really low.
Right now, I told them, do not turn on the light.
Just put this small lamp that we have.
You know, so if somebody's trying to look inside, they're not able to see inside.
Somebody's trying to look inside.
They're not able to see inside.
And, you know, right now I'm parking in my neighbor's parking lot.
She parks in my parking lot.
She's a citizen.
So she said to me, you know what?
Let them come for me.
So you park in my parking lot. The one in front of me, I told her that starting Monday,
before I open the door to go to my job,
something weird, she will let me know.
So you'll be able to figure out if,
you'll be able to detect if there are immigration or police officers.
Before I head out to work on Monday, I have to call her. So she has to come out and
see that, you know, everything is clear so I can come out and go to work.
This sounds really hard.
This sounds really hard.
It is.
It is because you think it's going to be only one week?
Yeah, it could be only a week.
But there is a list.
There is a list of people.
Do you think, Herminia, that your name is on that list?
I don't know.
I don't know Herminia
what do you say to the listeners
of which I'm sure
there are some
who are hearing your story
and are saying to themselves
that all this sounds really
really hard
but are also saying
that you were not granted citizenship or asylum.
And what that means is that you can't stay.
You're not here legally and that this is just law enforcement
and enforcement of the law.
Sometimes, sometimes you have to not be perfect. Think about the family, be human, be
humble to understand the hard situation people have in Central America. Of course, not everybody
can come and stay and they said, do your papers or you know what? Do it the legal way. Explain to me, what is the legal way? If I was in my country right now, what is the legal way to come here and stay here?
It sounds like you have an appreciation for Americans who are thinking to themselves that the United States can't accept every person who is unhappy in their own country, who wants a better life.
Not appreciation.
They repeat this phrase every single day.
Also, everybody who wants to come to this country just come and stay.
And it's not that.
At the moment,
somebody leave their country
is for a reason.
It's for a reason.
America is big enough to have immigrants.
You know why I love this country? Because I have my three times
of food. Because right now I can come outside and say whatever I want.
Because I have freedom to speech. I can't do that in my country.
Hermione, I really want to thank you so much for
talking to us. You're very
welcome.
Alright.
Let me get my stuff.
My
daughter called and I don't know if she's home.
I don't see her car here yet.
I'm walking away before I get in front of the building.
Okay, my windows are closed.
The light is on, so I'm going to go to talk about this
again let me check my
my mail before I get inside
because I don't want to go back outside
okay I'm going
through this stair
you're gonna hear my
doggies barking
when I get in
because they are the first one that comes through the door to say hi to mommy.
Hi.
Está solo.
Está mudo.
Yo vine, no había nadie.
No ha venido nadie.
¿Y la frita?
¿Y Lía? ¿Y Lía? Bueno, Lía la una venía a dejar. As of Sunday night, the large-scale immigration raids scheduled to begin over the weekend had not occurred. The Times reports that the operation was delayed
after being widely publicized,
tipping off undocumented immigrants
and giving them time to hide.
The Trump administration had previously told the Times
that these raids were part of a strategy of deterrence
designed to discourage undocumented people
from coming to or staying inside the
country. Herminia spent the weekend in her home and says she may go back to work today.
She now believes the raids will come at any moment and without any notice.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. On Sunday, President Trump
weighed in on the growing tensions between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and four liberal House
freshmen, declaring that the freshmen should return to the countries, quote,
from which they came. Three of the lawmakers, Ayanna Pressley, Rashida Tlaib, and Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez, were born in the United States. The fourth, Ilhan Omar, was born in Somalia,
but became a U.S. citizen as a teenager. Democratic lawmakers immediately called the president's message racist and xenophobic.
In a tweet, Pelosi wrote, quote,
When at-real Donald Trump tells four American congresswomen to go back to their countries,
he reaffirms his plan to make America great again has always been about making America white again.
And...
I am frustrated because this shouldn't happen.
You know, I have been through all sorts of emergencies and things happened that you couldn't anticipate.
We've been here before. I've seen this movie. We've all seen this movie.
Con Ed, the company that provides electricity to much of New York City,
has apologized for a power outage in Manhattan on Saturday night
that shut down subway lines, stranded people in elevators,
canceled Broadway shows, and left more than 70,000 customers without power for hours.
In Midtown, after the lights went out, the cast of several shows chose to deliver their
performances on the street. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.