Migrantes centroamericanos miran a través de la valla mientras un agente de la Patrulla Fronteriza vigila cerca del cruce fronterizo de El Chaparral en Tijuana, México (2018). Foto: tomada de The New York Times.

Daniela’s story: the journey to the United States (I)

Daniela Sánchez, a 33-year-old woman born in Caimito, Artemisa province, a lawyer by profession, recently married and without children, decided to set out for the United States last year: “too much ‘stubbornness’, too much secrecy, fear of being caught in an illegality when it is not possible to live in another way; in short, few options for the future”. And that was how she organized and undertook her journey, selling what she could in Cuba and supported by the family in the United States. This is the story of her “journey of her”:

I left Cuba on February 8, 2022 with a seven-hour layover in Panama, seven hours in Costa Rica, one hour in El Salvador and from there to Nicaragua, all by plane. Arriving in Nicaragua, the “contact” for the trip was there, a person who took us by bus through Nicaragua until we arrived very close to Honduras. There we stayed in a place that had terrible conditions, we practically couldn’t even go to bed because we were all glued to the floor, on a dirt floor and in a house without windows where we couldn’t bathe or see outside. Of course, they brought us food in a “thermopack” despite the poor conditions we were in.

The new wave of Cuban migration to the United States

From there we left and they put us on buses in groups. About five or six of those large buses arrived, of those large buses with a capacity of fifty, sixty people, I don’t remember exactly, that crossed the border and transported us throughout Honduras.

The police stopped us there all the time. They told us that if we didn’t give them money, they would return us to Nicaragua or take us prisoner. We went in groups of eighty, seventy people, we traveled in large groups, and there were rows and rows of buses, caravans of buses… In Honduras almost the entire journey was like this, until we arrived at a city, I don’t know, I confuse the places, imagine, but the crossing lasted almost a day, he hardly slept there, the whole time he went by bus.

We crossed the border into Guatemala at night and were put up in a hotel. Early, the next day, they took us to a bus station and we took one to the end of Guatemala and there it was the same process: “money goes, money comes” to the Guatemalan police: twenty pesos, thirty pesos, fifty pesos, what that they wanted to ask with the blackmail that, if we didn’t give them, they would turn us over or deport us to Cuba. Although we knew that there was no extradition because those countries cannot extradite people to Cuba, one is always afraid that they will arrest you, that they will return you to Nicaragua, and that is why one takes and gives them the money they ask for, because the objective is to reach to the final destination and not return to Cuba. Many exclaimed on the way that they preferred to run out of money, even stay working in “one of those countries”, rather than return to Cuba.

In Guatemala, near the border, they put us up in a small hotel. We stayed there for about two days because the guides told us that it was a bit difficult to go to Mexico. And, when we finally achieved it, the stay was much longer because I left Cuba on February 8 or 9, I was already in Mexico on February 14 and I just turned myself in at the United States border on March 6… so my longest crossing was in Mexico, 21 days or so.

We were three or four days in Tapachula 1 in lousy conditions. They put us in a kind of warehouse with quilts on the floor, because they weren’t mattresses, but quilts that, of course, had previously been used by a hundred thousand other people, imagine the conditions they were in. There we slept on the floor, although they gave us breakfast, lunch and dinner. It struck me that Tapachula did not seem like a Mexican city because of so many Cubans there were: it was full, full of Cubans, it was such a large wave of Cubans that it seemed to me that I was in a marginal neighborhood of Cuba with so many Cubans there, so many of people who, when the food arrived at a little school that worked as an improvised dining room, there were “queues” of thousands and thousands of people, thousands… And when the day came to leave the city everything was stopped because, according to “them” ( the polleros), they had not been given the “green light” (the authorities), and the day they finally put us on the transport, a few groups left and not the thousands of people that were in the city.

There they divided us by warehouses and put us on trucks, sitting next to each other. We were all packed tightly together and our backpacks on the floor below us to fit fifty people per truck. That day I saw about seven or eight trucks, you can imagine the number of people we were and, even so, more than half stayed in Tapachula.

From there they took us to another place where they took care of us because we were their “merchandise” —because that’s how I felt, like merchandise—, and we stayed there for several days, with many Cubans as well. They took us out in boats on a trip of an hour or a little more until we reached the coast, I think, of Oaxaca. When we made landfall, I had to do a very heavy ride in a 4×4 truck that I thought was going to kill us. I said to myself: “this far we got”, because we were going at an extreme speed and I felt that no one was going to be left alive… but we survived and reached the city of Oaxaca.

From there we went by plane to the border, to Mexicali, and we arrived at a very desolate “eight-lane” type highway. I realized that we were already in the desert. We crossed a fence and walked for about four hours. It was a very arid place and the journey was very tiring. The women sat exhausted, there was a girl who fainted, another got asthma that we thought she was not going to be able to continue, and so on… I “attacked” myself when I saw that and started crying: a girl much younger than me , twenty-four years old, with that asthma attack and there was no way he was going to recover. Luckily, one of the people who was guiding us had salbutamol and with that she perked up a bit.

When we arrived at a certain place on the border, the “guides” told us that they could not accompany us anymore because they could not be in that area, so we continued walking alone for about an hour and, according to the instructions they gave us, we knew that we had to climb a hill and then go down it to see “the Wall two”, and there we had to start skirting it.

In that part of the journey we had to walk so much and the fatigue was so great that I thought I would never get to the place where that “Wall” was: it was “walk, walk, walk, walk, walk, walk…”

And, when I was finally attached to the “Wall”, I had to go around it by a high, high, high hill, and that was when my strength ran out, so much so that I didn’t want to walk anymore.

I think I was able to get there thanks to the men who were on the “traverse”. They encouraged me and took me by the hands and practically carried me, because I said I couldn’t take it anymore, because it was a walk! Imagine, through the desert, and where we permanently sank into the sand, which was very soft. In addition, we got into holes, we fell, we were filled with thorns because of the number of bushes with thorns that there are, of cacti that are in the desert, no, no, no, no, it was tremendous. I think it was one of the worst things, the end; for me it was the worst of the journey.

There the men had to help the women, because it wasn’t just me who couldn’t go up. It was an immense, immense hill, and the sand did not help you because it was desert sand, the kind you sink with, you fall all the time… All I did was hold myself with one hand from the bars of the wall, while a man pushed my shoulder with the backpack from behind and another helped me with the other arm in front. Then, when we turned down the “Wall” we realized that we had to go down the hill again and everyone, even the men, sat down as if to say “we can’t take it anymore”… But everyone there, oh! I can’t explain it to you, it was one of the deepest feelings, a very deep feeling because everyone was crying: crying, and crying and crying… Because we realized that we had achieved it, that they hadn’t come looking for us yet but now We were on the “other side”, on American soil, and from the shot we drew strength from where we didn’t have and we went down that hill like “a shot”: everyone crying, everyone quickly, quickly, quickly, quickly, and immediately they arrived… they arrived in those little trucks, you know?

I remember as if it were today: he was a gringo boy, blond American; an American blonde; and a tall, dark-haired, very nice boy, Cuban, by the way, who said that he had come there as a child and treated us very well. They told us “Welcome to the Land of Freedom”…Imagine! Everyone crying: men, women, everyone crying with joy…They told us to sit down, to take off our shoelaces, coats, things that we had doubles, the “plush”, the earrings in the case of women… Then they gave us some “nylon”, some plastic to put the backpacks, the laces, things like that. They put the women on one side and the men on the other, and we traveled a number of kilometers and it took us a long time to get there, because it seemed to turn around, I don’t know why, and nothing could be seen from the outside, nothing more from some holes…

To be continue…

***

Grades:

1 A Mexican city belonging to the state of Chiapas and bordering Guatemala where there has been a significant number of irregular migrants in transit for some years, including Cubans.

two It refers to the border wall that divides Mexico from the United States.

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