‘The Caravan of the Mutilated’ Shows What People Risk When They Come To America
The Caravan of the Mutilated Shows What People Risk When They Come To America
by Alice Ollstein & Esther Yu-Hsi Lee Posted on June 19, 2015 at 8:00 am
WASHINGTON, D.C. In 2009, 34-year-old Honduran national Jose Efrain Vasquez was running from immigration authorities to board La Bestia, the Mexican freight train that carries hundreds of thousands of migrants northward, when he slipped on a rock. The train wheels pulled him under, dragged him, and left him with an amputated left leg. A few years earlier, Honduran father of four Geremia Gamez was running from police authorities in Southern Mexico to catch the same freight train, when he fell and lost both of his legs.
Thats when my American Dream collapsed, Gamez told ThinkProgress, in Spanish. I was trying to help them my family but I ended up being another burden for them.
Vasquez, whose leg is amputated four inches above the knee, said he suffered three years of deep depression following his accident and subsequent deportation back to Honduras. Close to tears, he told ThinkProgress: We dont blame the U.S. for our injuries. Were just asking them to try to help our government and work with them so that we dont have to leave in the first place.
Both Gamez and Vasquez are part of the Caravan of the Mutilated, a group of Honduran men who were seriously injured or lost a limb while climbing La Bestia, or The Beast, as they made their way into the United States. The Beast is one of the fastest ways for migrants to get from Mexicos southern border with Guatemala to its northern border with the United States. About half a million migrants ride The Beast annually, NPR reported last year. Beast riders, like Gamez and Vasquez, often get sucked into the wheels while they try to jump on or fall off while sleeping.
More:
http://thinkprogress.org/immigration/2015/06/19/3671105/caravan-of-the-mutilated/