When going for milk becomes a nightmare
Imagine that your life is as stable as a house of cards in an earthquake. This is how a family lived in Washington, until one day, the father went out to buy milk and diapers. It sounds like the beginning of a poorly written thriller, but no, it is the harsh reality for many. The guy didn’t come back. Instead, a phone call came: he had been arrested. “Don’t worry, it’s just the local police,” he said, as if that were a consolation. Spoiler alert: it wasn’t. The next update on his whereabouts was from a detention center in Virginia. And then, deportation. End of story. Or rather, the beginning of trauma for those who stayed.
The mother, an undocumented Guatemalan immigrant with more than a decade living in the shadows of the American dream, was left in charge of her three children, all born in the capital. Fear settled in his house like an unwanted tenant. So much so that taking the two oldest to the nearby charter school became an impossible mission. The reason? The panic that, on any corner, masked ICE agents would be waiting for her to follow in her husband’s footsteps. He spoke on condition of anonymity, because, let’s be honest, in this dystopia, anonymity is the new bulletproof shield.
The collateral effect: education in check
Schools in Washington reopened their doors in late August, but the atmosphere was far from a happy return to school. Instead of backpacks full of hope, the children carried anxiety. The police presence intensified, transforming normally quiet neighborhoods into scenes for a horror series that no one asked to see. And this, friends, is not a phenomenon isolated to the capital. It is the prototype of what could be replicated in other large cities with the strategy of sending federal agents to the streets.
The impact on the community is palpable. Ben Williams, a social studies teacher who also serves on the District of Columbia State Board of Education, summed it up with painful starkness: “In my community, the impact has been immense fear and terror that threatens the safety of students as they go to and from school every day.” In other words, the nightmare is not just the deportation, it is the constant uncertainty, the paranoia that today it will be the neighbor’s turn, and tomorrow, it will be yours.
In the Mount Pleasant neighborhood, where million-dollar houses coexist with apartments owned by immigrant families, the tension is so thick you can cut it with a knife. Arrests became commonplace, so common that neighbors began documenting them as if they were birdwatchers of a particularly sinister species. Raúl Cortez, a Salvadoran immigrant, said that his 7-year-old son has developed a deep fear of the police. “Kids pay attention. They’re very smart and they know what’s going on,” he said. It doesn’t take a genius to notice the trauma: the boy sees a patrol car and his eyes widen. Welcome to the stolen childhood.
The resistance is organized: walking buses and orange whistles
In the face of adversity, the community did not sit back. Aware that many parents were afraid to leave their homes, the volunteers organized themselves by creating “walking buses.” Basically, they are escort groups so that children can walk from their apartment buildings to schools with a human escort. Outside Bancroft Elementary School, a center that teaches in English and Spanish, volunteers stand on corners in fluorescent orange vests, ready to blow a whistle if they see immigration authorities approaching. It’s like a game of hopscotch, but losing means deportation for your family.
This fear of ICE is not unfounded paranoia; It has real and measurable consequences. Research has linked immigration raids near schools to lower academic performance for Latino students, who are more likely to have family ties to immigrants. The Trump administration’s immigration crackdown had already wreaked havoc on school attendance in other parts of the country. Following his inauguration, districts across the US reported a drop in student presence. In California’s Central Valley, for example, immigration raids coincided with a 22% increase in no-shows compared to the previous two years, according to a Stanford University study.
Meanwhile, in Washington, educational authorities are trying to remain calm. Paul Kihn, the director of education, maintained in a press conference that attendance was at similar levels to last year. But is it really like that? D.C. Public Schools They refused to provide specific data on school attendance during this federal intervention. Ben Williams, who represents schools with large immigrant communities, was more direct: Attendance at some centers has fallen. In other words, fear is winning, and classrooms are emptying.
**Now what?** The situation is a grotesque reminder of how aggressive immigration policies not only destroy families, but erode the fundamental right to education. Children, the most vulnerable in this power game, are the ones who bear the psychological and academic consequences. The community responds with solidarity, but it should not have to do the work of the State. It is a story that repeats itself, one that we hoped would remain in the past, but that, like a bad reboot of a franchise, has come back to haunt us.
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