Mother and Daughter Reunited
Herminia rushed out of the Tucson cathedral to reunite with her daughter Rosy who had just been released after spending seven months in the immigration prison in Eloy, Arizona. Herminia had been arrested in front of the White House, carried out a two week hunger strike in front of the ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) office in Phoenix, and spent the last four weeks in the cathedral in her campaign to win her daughter’s release.
Herminia rushed out of the Tucson cathedral to reunite with her daughter Rosy who had just been released after spending seven months in the immigration prison in Eloy, Arizona. Herminia had been arrested in front of the White House, carried out a two week hunger strike in front of the ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) office in Phoenix, and spent the last four weeks in the cathedral in her campaign to win her daughter’s release.
Mother and daughter ran towards each other and came together in a tearful embrace surrounded by the light of the TV cameras. “I struggled to get out and I dreamed of being with my mom,” said Rosy. “Never give up and always struggle to realize your dreams.”
“This is where Rosy returned to life,” Herminia told me earlier inside the cathedral. “She’s on her way. She called and said, ‘Mom, I’m out now. The nightmare has ended’.”
I visited Rosy in the Corrections Corporation of America prison on March 2. We passed through five locked gates and doors on our way to the visit room. She was in a green uniform and we could only be with her for one hour.
Rosy told me that her family moved to the U.S. when she was just 11 years old. They lived for two years in Denver and seven years in Mesa, Arizona.
In December 2012, the family went back to the state of Quintana Roo in southern Mexico because Rosy’s grandfather was dying of cancer. They found the country had changed during the time they had been gone. They were at risk of being kidnapped because the criminal groups thought they had money from their time in the U.S. and her father was brutally beaten. Rosy and Fatima (her 13 year old sister) were both bullied a lot at school.
They fled from Quintana Roo and came north to Nogales. Herminia, Rosy and Fatima presented themselves at the border here on September 22, 2013 and asked for asylum. Herminia and Fatima were released that same day on parole but Rosy was sent to the immigration prison in Florence. The next day, on her 20th birthday, she was transferred to the prison in Eloy.
Herminia passed the first interview for political asylum when the official found that she had a credible fear of persecution if she were sent back to Mexico. Rosy’s case was moving much more slowly and Herminia decided the only option was to launch a public campaign to win her daughter’s release. Rosy was finally released on bond on April 28 and said, “I can’t believe I’m out here and not in there.”
The Obama administration has deported more than two million people and two thousand women are currently being held in the Eloy immigration prison. “What would happen if Obama’s daughters, or wife, were separated from him?” asked Herminia. “What would he do?”
In love and solidarity,
Scott Nicholson, a member of University Congregational UCC, in Missoula, Montana, serves as a volunteer with the Hogar de Esperanza y Paz (Home of Hope and Peace) community center in Nogales, Mexico.