![]() ![]() This has a parallel with the PPE course that I have recently embarked on. Perhaps sometimes they can be broken down into small sections so that the human dimension of the task is lost. However, upon arriving at the fourth section, “Community”, which is based on the haiku-like notes that Valeria and her niece find during their first days of helping within the labyrinth that is the US immigration system, you begin to feel optimistic.ĭespite the book’s narrow focus, the author proves that it is difficult for questions regarding the lives of others to be answered. This all sounds a bit grim and as you read through the forty questions – as a child fleeing from Guatemala or whichever other country would do upon their detainment in the US – you begin to feel angry and helpless in the light of the American nightmare that those who fearfully cross the border alone are plunged into upon arrival in the US. Through anecdotal analysis of one volunteer seeking to use her skills to be able to help in the crazy world that is Trump’s America, the broader immigration crisis is highlighted. ![]() This essay shares the plight of undocumented child immigrants in the US using the 40 questions that they are faced with upon arrival into the “land of the free”. “The problem with trying to tell their story, is that it has no beginning, no middle and no end.” ![]()
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