Left in limbo: One family鈥檚 grueling journey to find safety in the U.S.
Natalia and Jos茅 traveled thousands of miles, sleeping rough on the streets, determined to reach a safe place to raise their children.
Natalia and Jos茅 traveled thousands of miles, sleeping rough on the streets, determined to reach a safe place to raise their children.
Seeking asylum is a human right鈥攂ut in the United States, a new asylum ban implemented by the Biden Administration will severely restrict asylum seekers from presenting their cases and force vulnerable people to return to unsafe situations.
People like Natalia*, a 22-year-old mother of two from Honduras who has been forced to relocate and start from scratch鈥攕everal times. Each time, she rebuilt a small business to provide for her family; each time, her dreams were destroyed by new episodes of violence.
In February, Natalia and her partner, Jos茅, arrived in Ciudad Ju谩rez, close to the U.S. border, where they spent months trying to get an appointment to present their asylum case. Now, with the new restrictions, many people fleeing violence will be unable to exercise this right at all.
Below, their story.
Natalia never imagined herself leaving her hometown in Honduras. 鈥淚t is very beautiful,鈥 she says. 鈥淭here are some beautiful rivers, mountains, parks.... People are kind, when one passes, they talk to you. It is a very precious community, honestly.鈥
She had bright hopes for her family鈥檚 future. 鈥淚 had a business, and my partner worked. We had high hopes for the two of us prospering. We hoped that our children could grow up there, that we could fix our house.鈥 Unfortunately for them, but all too common in their country, Natalia and Jos茅 were forced to leave after extortion threats from criminal gangs put their lives in danger.
Arriving in a different city in Honduras, Natalia and Jos茅 started a cybercaf茅, but it wasn鈥檛 long before new criminal groups began bullying them, trying to get them to help with illicit activities. 鈥淲e did not want to because we are afraid of messing with them and with the authorities,鈥 Natalia explains. 鈥淭hen they told us to leave鈥攈ence, we left.鈥
The family moved again, only to encounter a similar situation. They fled a third time, to a city where Jos茅 found work in a factory. Natalia started another small business selling clothes, makeup and sundries from a tent outside their home. 鈥淲e were doing well, actually鈥. We organized livestreams on Facebook and that鈥檚 how we sold things,鈥 Natalia says.
A little over a month later, yet another criminal gang began extorting Natalia for 鈥減rotection鈥濃攖he cost of doing business in Honduras. 鈥淲e could not raise the money,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淥ur business had just started, so it wasn鈥檛 something stable. [The armed gangs] rule not just one area but control everything...they told us 鈥榥o more,鈥 and we had to leave.鈥
Packing up a fourth time, Natalia and Jos茅 made the painful decision to leave their two children in the care of their grandmother, hoping that this would be safer for the kids than the journey to Mexico.
Natalia had been told about organizations in Mexico that could help them get the documentation they would need to stay in the country. Clinging onto a new chance for safety, she and Jos茅 made their way north, only to find themselves in a grueling situation: working to cover their basic needs and sleeping on the street while they waited for their asylum papers.
After two months, Natalia and Jos茅 were still without the humanitarian visas that would allow them to continue their journey and find a safer place in Mexico. The wait was filled with misinformation and false hope. They spent 10 days sleeping on the street near the immigration office, enduring the sun, hungry all the time.
Desperate, they decided to travel on to Mexico City, where they met with more frustration, and took one last leap of faith鈥攆ollowing advice they found posted on Facebook, they flew to Ciudad Ju谩rez, a border city where they felt they could contact Jos茅鈥檚 uncle living in the U.S. This, they agreed, was their last chance to provide their children with a future.
In Ciudad Ju谩rez, Natalia and Jos茅 were sleeping on the streets once again, until they found space at a temporary shelter. Then the couple began the arduous task of making appointments on an app called CBP One, notoriously dysfunctional despite being designed by a U.S. government agency. Day after day, they tried to secure a time slot, anxious about their precarious living arrangement. Natalia attempted to create a sense of normalcy by cooking and doing laundry in the shelter鈥檚 communal spaces. She also joined a group created by an 探花精选 Women鈥檚 Protection and Empowerment team, which provided her with a network of friends who offered emotional support.
In April 2023, three months after first arriving in Ciudad Ju谩rez, Natalia finally was able to present her family's case for asylum in the U.S.
On May 11, 2023, a Trump-era border policy known as Title 42, which allowed the U.S. to rapidly expel people crossing the border, ended. However, a new policy, one that would prevent most asylum seekers from presenting their cases, is taking its place.
The new policy, implemented by President Biden, bars asylum-seekers like Natalia and Jos茅, who crossed through another country on their way to the U.S. border, unless they previously had applied for, and been denied, asylum in the country of transit.
All asylum seekers鈥 whose applications are denied will be required to make an appointment at a U.S. port of entry through the cumbersome and unreliable CBP One. This will leave thousands vulnerable to violence, kidnapping, and extortion in cities like Ciudad Ju谩rez.
The 探花精选 provides critical support to asylum seekers like Natalia and her family on both sides of the U.S. border and along migration routes.
In the United States, the 探花精选 is providing case management, humanitarian reception, information services and legal assistance to over 62,000 asylum seekers, unaccompanied children and other vulnerable people seeking protection.
In Mexico, together with the European Union (EU), the 探花精选 is responding to the needs of people traveling through the main migration corridors; during 2021, we expanded operations and currently are present in Ciudad Ju谩rez, Tijuana, Matamoros, Tapachula, Palenque, Tenosique, Acayucan and Mexico City.
Seeking asylum is legal. No one should be penalized, returned to harm or separated from their children for exercising this right.
Or learn about more ways you can help support refugees and asylum seekers in the U.S.
*Name changed for privacy reasons.