国产视频

In Short

Jonathan Blitzer on the Long History of the Border Crisis

Border Wall
Flickr Creative Commons

国产视频 (Emerson Collective) 2021 Fellow Jonathan Blitzer spoke about his book, Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here, for 鈥淭hree questions鈥 in The Fifth Draft, the Fellows Program鈥檚 monthly newsletter. Blitzer is a staff writer at The New Yorker.

Your Fellows project, the book聽, is a narrative history of the migration crisis at the United States鈥 southern border. Can you share the genesis of the project?

国产视频 ten years ago, the general profile of the people who were crossing the US-Mexico border changed in a profound way: it went from single Mexican men, looking for work, to families and children seeking asylum. The vast majority of them came from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. US authorities were immediately overwhelmed, and have been ever since. The world is now in the midst of a period of unprecedented mass migration. In the US, this gets described, in increasingly narrow terms, as a 鈥渂order emergency.鈥 It is that, to be clear. But confining the situation to the border drastically misses the story鈥攂oth of how we got here and where we might be going.聽As a reporter, charging between Central America, the US borderlands, and Washington, I kept finding myself stuck in a loop, lurching from one crisis to the next, as though it were a new story each time. I wanted this book to break that cycle. It starts in 1980, the year the US codified asylum and refugee law, and it takes us to the present.

But confining the situation to the border drastically misses the story鈥攂oth of how we got here and where we might be going.

How did you come to meet the four Central Americans whose stories you follow in the book? Were you looking for people with specific experiences or from certain countries?

Years of traveling and reporting led me to them, but their experiences guided me. I didn鈥檛 start with any preconceived ideas about whose profiles would make the most sense for the book. I鈥檇 always been interested in people whose lives could help me unlock the broader relationship between the US and Central America. Eddie Anzora鈥攂orn in El Salvador, raised in California, and eventually deported鈥攅mbodies the deep relationship between Los Angeles and San Salvador. Lucrecia Hern谩ndez Mack introduced me to the legacy (and necessity) of democratic activism in Guatemala. Keldy Mabel Gonz谩les Brebe de Z煤niga, who鈥檚 Honduran, showed me what happens when 鈥渉ome鈥 becomes a route between places, rather than a fixed place. The person I met last was actually the person I鈥檇 known about the longest: Juan Romagoza, a Salvadoran doctor and public health advocate. He was central to an important human-rights case in the early 2000s, so I鈥檇 read transcripts of his testimony before. We finally connected at the start of the pandemic.

You also write about American politics and have recently covered the race for Speaker of the House. If you could put your book in any congressperson鈥檚 hands, who would it be and why?

One subtext of the book is that Congress must modernize the immigration system so that asylum at the border isn鈥檛 the sole pressure point for immigrants coming to the US. That strain has devastated the system and politically discredited the very principle of asylum, which is a tragedy in its own right. A group of Senators has been tackling the issue of asylum reform. Some of them appear to be exploring this in relatively good faith: Michael Bennet, Chris Murphy, Krysten Sinema, Thom Tillis, James Lankford. The political pressure to scrap asylum is high. I鈥檇 share my book with these Senators because I believe (I hope not naively) that they鈥檇 care to understand the moral and historical stakes of what鈥檚 on the chopping block right now. Beyond the Hill, I鈥檇 love to leave a pile of books on the Seventh Floor of the State Department. For too long, State has overlooked migration in the Western Hemisphere.


厂耻产蝉肠谤颈产别听here聽to receive next month鈥檚 issue of聽The Fifth Draft.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Jonathan Blitzer on the Long History of the Border Crisis