July 2, 2015 began with a bologna sandwich and eight hours in a cell. Adrian Quiroz’s four months in immigration detention were coming to a close, and he was going to be deported to Mexico that day. He and the other deportees were strip-searched, handcuffed together, and then ushered onto the bus that would take them out of Mesa, Arizona and through the high-traffic border town of Nogales. Quiroz recalls the frenzied tension on the bus as migrants pressed their faces against the windows, trying to get a look at what would soon forcibly be their “home.” Many of them didn’t remember what Mexico was like, some weren’t from Mexico at all.
“Everyone was asking, ‘What are you going to do, where are you going to go?” Quiroz recalls, “I tried to sleep a little bit, when I woke up I had arrived: Nogales, Mexico.” He remembers the patrol officer’s words as he got off the bus, “Don’t come back.”
For Quiroz that was a difficult reality to bear. He is a single father to two sons who were taken into custody of the Arizona Department of Child Safety while he was detained. That first night in Mexico he slept on a cold park bench near the border. “I rest my eyes, but I didn’t rest my mind,” he remembers, “I kept thinking and thinking, ‘What’s going to happen to my kids? Who’s going to take care of them? Will they give them the love I have given them?’”
The next morning he woke up to his sobering new reality. He was in a city he had never seen before. His Spanish was rusty. His pockets were empty. The last time he had been in Mexico he was 12-years-old. After a man attempted to kidnap his brother, his parents brought the family to the United States. For twenty years they lived the American dream. Quiroz went to college, started a successful landscaping company, became father to two beautiful sons, and now within 24 hours it was gone.
He went back to the only people he knew in his new country, the Mexican border patrol officers. “We were looking for you,” they said, “we want to bring you to the ‘comedor.’” Comedor means ‘dining room’ in Spanish.
The Kino Border Initiative (commonly known as el comedor by locals) is not much to look at. It’s a shopworn one-room shelter a block from the U.S.-Mexico border. It scarcely looks big enough to hold a kindergarten class, yet its humble quarters manage to feed and welcome the daily dozens of recent deportees constantly feeding the line outside its doors.
The Kino Border Initiative is a Catholic, binational migrant aid organization. Through the shared efforts of religious sisters, priests, lay employees, and a steady stream of volunteers, the tiny “dining room” is able to offer migrants two meals a day, shelter for women and children, healthcare, legal advice, and cautionary guidance about the realities of crossing the desert. Next to the bathrooms are maps warning migrants of the distance they can feasibly travel without dehydrating. Above that is a faded mural of Jesus sharing a meal with his disciples. And below that, a crucifix above a rusty sink. It’s an organization well aware of its limitations but brazen enough to minister anyway, tirelessly stomaching life-altering catastrophe on an hourly basis.
The tangible offerings, while important, are humble, and are far outshined by the space the comedor provides migrants to reckon with a deep emotional and spiritual wound that comes from deportation. The natural camaraderie instilled in the dining room allows them the freedom to come in haggard, disillusioned, rejected, with the “don’t come backs” still reverberating in their ears, and be imbued with some semblance of human dignity in the offering of Mass, in the bandaging of a wound, in fitting blistered feet with a new pair of shoes.
Quiroz remembers when he first walked through those doors. “They started serving us the food, and my first meal at the comedor was amazing,” he gushes. “They gave me new pants, a shirt, clean socks, clean underwear. They started asking me questions, ‘Are you alright? You need more water? More food? Can we help you with something?’ They’re just trying to talk to you and hear what you have to say. If you want help they help you. With anything.”
Quiroz knew what he wanted help with getting his kids back, and while custody battles are well out of the Kino Border staff’s control, there were steps they could help him take. Within two weeks they helped Quiroz find a job in Nogales (to be as close as possible to his kids) making garage door openers for an American company. Within four months he was settled in an apartment with his mom who moved back to help support him. That meal at “el comedor” was a moment to breathe, a moment to focus on new goals. In a barrage of dehumanizing voices and behavior, it was the volunteers of the Kino Border Initiative and their gentle motivation that tipped the scales against despair.
“For me it was such a blessing because I finally didn’t feel alone. I had my compadres. It gave me a little bit of faith and hope to realize, ‘Okay, this is going to be alright. I can do this, I can do this. Thank you God, I can do this.’”
After two years, Quiroz was reunited with his kids. They now live a simple life in a meager apartment. Quiroz works the night shift at a factory while his mom helps take care of his sons. After two years in foster care in the United States, his sons speak an adorable mash-up of English and Spanish. They may have an apartment in Nogales now, but Quiroz says Mexico will never feel quite like home.
“That place,” Quiroz emphasizes pointing to the Kino Border Initiative, “that’s my home.” He continues to go there to share meals with the staff and volunteers who helped him, and to offer consolation to the migrants who arrive every day who are just like him. “And those people are our family.”
Full story at Angelus News.
There are two cities named Nogales [walnut] both on the US Mexico border; one in Arizona and the other literally a step across the border in Sonora, Mexico.
The article suggests the sons were born in the US, and thus US citizens. There is no mention of what happened to the mother [who may have been a US citizen]. As a college educated person, living here for twenty four years, did Quiroz ever try to do the necessary steps to attain legal status in the US? I suspect he was well aware of the risks.
A very interesting story with a lot of unanswered questions.
exactly!
Good points. I suspect this is another :amalgam” character, created to tell the story and jerk the tears. There are so many ways he could have cared for his children and made good choices for himself as well. This smells like a created, reconstructed character.
I remember reading a lot of anecdotes… stories that just bring tears to your eyes and make you want to rush to the defense of the protagonist. Most of these protagonists were poor, oppressed women who were forced to give birth to an unwanted child rather than be permitted to end its life.
It never serves the Gospel of Christ to try and manipulate emotions on a topic that needs serious reflection and debate. The consistent dehumanization of those of us that see the wisdom of controlled immigration, rather than open borders that allow people to flood in indiscriminately, is evil. Church leaders that are practicing this form of propganda should hang their heads in shame.
I couldn’t agree more. Decisions, especially important decisions should be made rationally. Not emotionally. Stories like these are designed to bypass our rational thinking and to react with emotion. It never ends well when we use emotional feelings for rational thinking.
The purpose of stories like this is to give a face to the faceless thousands who find themselves in circumstances inconsistent with US policy, and thus to stop their dehumanization. The purpose of many of the parables was to give a face to people who were being dehumanized by those around them. No one is “consistently dehumaizing” you. We just disagree with you and find your position inconsistent with the Gospel, which calls us to give a face to the faceless.
The purpose of the story was to praise the Catholic organization that is helping him.
And praising the Catholic organizations helping him is a good thing too.
The man in the article is a sub-par parent. Why is it that he knows he is subject to deportation, yet he makes no provision for the custody and care of his sons if his arrest, detainment, and deportation should occur? I have plans in place for all kinds of contingencies for the protection if my children. If he us looking for pity on this matter, it is his own fault. Individual anecdotes presented in order to change minds as an Appeal to Pity are not Germaine to the larger issues at hand. Catholic have a 2,000 year history of teaching the faithful to apply reason to their thinking. You don’t just throw that out the window because someone’s situation is sad.
Should the children suffer for the sins of the father? What would Jesus say? Go back and study our history and you will learn about how so many had to flee their country in order to survive. The man was brought here by his parents to save his life – a refugee. Should we deport him now, after so many years? It is not the American way to snatch children away from their parents, and then house them in cages in detention centers. It is not the Christian way. Jesus would not do that! It is not the American way to have two-year-olds appear in court and be judged, without their parents or legal advice. We are becoming more like pre-WWII Germany every day.It’s not the American way, and it’s not the Christian way. Jesus said to bring the children…
Bob One— You ask “What would Jesus say?” I don’t know for sure; and you don’t either. A serious problem is present here, with no easy answers. Stop trivializing it by repeating a worn-out bromide.
What is the serious problem here? Is it refugees from brutal governments and drug lords seeking refuge? Is it poor families who have no means of employment because there are no job, they can’t feed their families, and they want to be safe? Is it because they are different from us? Is it because they want to do the jobs that Americans won’t do? What is the serious problem? Let’s put up a wall, that will keep “those” people out! Really? Most of the border has a fence or wall already and it doesn’t work. Why haven’t we heard about putting a wall up on the northern border? Is it because most of them are white or because they don’t need to come here? What is the serious problem? Be specific!
I agree with Bob One! Jesus is the One to follow, always! Many people in this world are so poor, suffering in terrible circumstances, and do what they can, to survive! Many mistakes occur, and often, “correct reasoning” is abandoned, for survival! We Americans are far more fortunate than we think, compared to the rest of the world! We need to compassionately reach out, and help others, who suffer— and do it legally, like the Catholic “comedor!”
I agree with Bob One! We must follow Jesus’ teachings, in all aspects of our lives! Especially, to give compassionate help to the poor and suffering of the world– also following our country’s laws! We are very blessed to live in America! Many millions of poeple suffer unjustly, in terrible situations, all over the world— and dream of coming to America! Some make bad mistakes, while seeking to survive– and perhaps to also escape torture and death– and end up with many problems, when trying to enter America, illegally. Children especialy suffer, whe their parents make mistakes! The Catholic “comedor” charity sounds like a wonderful support, for deportees to Mexico!
The problem is that they the break a law. Then they get caught. And there are consequences.
The problem is that Congress, who could change the law, wont change the law.
The problem is that so many of them got away with breaking the law for so long and the consequences were delayed for so long that they had children here. And now that the law is being enforced, it breaks up a family.
These are not refugees. Refugees have a separate process. And these are not people who sought asylum from disastrous conditions at home. For people needing asylum there is another process.
BOB ONE— In answer to all the questions in your post, let me refer you to your own words: “What would Jesus say?”. You seem to prefer parroting pieties to careful consideration and weighing of real but conflicting values.
I agree with Bob One! We must follow Jesus’ teachings, in all aspects of our lives! Especially, to give compassionate help to the poor and suffering of the world– also following our country’s laws! We are very blessed to live in America! Many millions of poeple suffer unjustly, in terrible situations, all over the world— and dream of coming to America! Some make bad mistakes, while seeking to survive– and perhaps to also escape torture and death– and end up with many problems, when trying to enter America, illegally. Children especialy suffer, whe their parents make mistakes! The Catholic “comedor” charity sounds like a wonderful support, for deportees to Mexico!
I think Pope Francis has spoken very clearly as to how Christians, including Catholics, are to treat migrants. Re-read the parable of the Good Samaritan! Enough said.
So what, William Robert? The Pope’s specific solution to a thorny problem having more than one equally moral solution does not bind in conscience.
Anonymous, if you are a good Catholic, following Jesus, and also, a law-abiding citizen– then what?? For love of God, and neighbor– who is suffering greatly? Wonder how many of the Americans reading this news item, have had broken marriages, or broken, “mistake” out-of-wedock relationships– and ended up as a loving, devoted father, to two adorable little boys– and wanted to “do right” by them, despite their past errors?? So much LOVE here— and no abortions! Two dear little precious boys– badly wanted, loved, and treasured!! Great!! Lots of prayers for this family’s SUCCESS!!
A reminder to all those who wish to criticize Adrian Quiroz, the Bible insists that we care for the alien among us. ‘The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt; I am the LORD your God.’ (Leviticus 19:34)
Perhaps, critics might say, this is Leviticus, and we have a New Testament, a new covenant. Well, Jesus was a refugee. Mary and Joseph were refugees. They fled political and religious persecution to Egypt for the sake of safety, for the sake of the protection of life. Matthew 2:13–23
I don’t, for the life of me, understand self-professed Christians who are so unable to understand why people might seek refuge in America,…
Anonymous – you are equivocating. Your logic could be applied to the contraception issue. Yet Pope’s have been very clear that it is not permissible. We are our brother’s keeper.
He’ll be back . . .
. . . for EBT, WIC, School Breakfast Program, School Lunch Program, Milk Program, Summer Food Program, Child/Adult Care meals and snacks, Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program, Infant Supplemental Food Program, Disaster Food Program . . .
. . . and that’s not all of the food programs. Due to a mercifull character limit, I won’t mention free and subsidized housing, healthcare, education, Obama phones, etc. Also affirmative action, set-asides, and quotas.
Yea, he’ll be back. I guarantee it. Can you blame him?