I worked at a child migrant center. What i was told to do was so inhumane that i quit.

I worked at a child migrant center. What i was told to do was so inhumane that i quit.

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Antar Davidson/Instagram Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free _Mother Jones Daily_. _Antar Davidson is a former employee at


Southwest Key, a nonprofit__ chain of migrant shelters, who recently made headlines __for talking about the cruel conditions at the facilities. Davidson started working at a Tucson, Arizona,


center in February, two months before President Donald Trump’s zero-tolerance policy was instituted. He quit his job earlier this month, after a supervisor ordered him to separate hugging


siblings who believed their parents had died. __Here Davidson_ _tells _Mother Jones_, in his own words, about helping migrant children through martial arts, the changes since Trump’s


zero-tolerance policy, and why he ultimately could not stay at his job._ My father is Brazilian, an immigrant who became a citizen of this country. My mother is Jewish, and we have family


that came through Ellis Island. So I saw this job as an opportunity to pay forward what has been done for me, by bringing my unique skills, which include extensive experience in the


Brazilian martial art of capoeira, to teach these minors. It took me a couple months, but eventually I got the capoeira program at the facility started, and it was really successful. I was


teaching about 20 to 60 kids per day. It was exactly what these kids needed: They were in an extremely micromanaged environment with a lot of stress and it was an opportunity for them to be


free and assume a new identity. I gave some of them nicknames. I wrote capoeira songs for them in Spanish. I taught them moves. We really connected, and we built a unique community. I got to


know them in a much more intimate way than the majority of people working at the facility did. When Trump’s zero-tolerance policy started being rolled out, the kids who were coming into the


center were so much more disturbed than the kids who had traveled to the US on their own: They were younger kids who were not prepared, who did not make the journey alone, who were


essentially separated from their mothers and fathers and not told where they were for weeks. Inevitably, that led to them having a lot more needs. An organization like this has a big


responsibility to these kids—that they will have the opportunity to be reunified with their parents and enter the public school system; ultimately, that they can succeed. But as Southwest


Key’s CEO was getting rich, he was ignoring the responsibility, and doing the minimum. Over the past decade [starting under Obama], this organization has steadily seen an increase in the


amount of federal funding they receive. The CEO and his wife together make more than $1 million annually, in part from federal tax money. That’s more than twice the presidential salary.


While border apprehensions declined over that period, federal funding skyrocketed. That’s not a Trump problem. That was the previous administration. Donald Trump didn’t ruin immigration. You


can’t ruin something that’s already ruined. But the zero-tolerance policy is an inept tactic that the Trump administration is taking. It’s not a tactic that represents a clear understanding


of the complexities of Latin America’s immigration situation. You have such a long history of US involvement in these areas, and what you’re seeing is the result of that. We’re facing a


huge migratory wave as more and more areas of Latin America become destabilized. So when a shift leader told me to tell a group of kids they couldn’t hug, it confirmed to me something that I


had been feeling for a while: This wasn’t the humanitarian nonprofit that it was claiming to be. It was a private prison for youth that is extremely lucrative. One of the main


characteristics of a system like that is a lack of compassion. The shift leader was completely ignoring the fact these kids had been separated from their mother, they were in a country where


they didn’t speak the language, and these kids were responding to being told they were being pulled away from their own family. They were crying and holding each other for dear life, and


here comes this shift leader and she thought it was appropriate to say, “Tell them they can’t hug! Tell them they can’t hug!” That’s only a rule you’d enforce if you saw these children not


as children, but as a dollar amount. That night happened to be my birthday, and I intended to propose to my girlfriend. I had the diamond ring and everything. But I was so shaken by what had


happened. I came home, got dressed, we went out, but I was just staring into space and thinking about what had happened. She actually knew I wanted to propose, but said, “I know you want


to, but now is not the time. Let’s do it another day.” So, I postponed the proposal. I quit shortly after that. I think we could save a lot of money and ease the migration (if that’s the


major problem here) by doing real programs that give these kids less of a reason to leave their home countries, and an alternative to the drug organizations that are pushing them out. If


we’re just traumatizing these kids and throwing them back, then we’re not just giving them an economic reason to join these gangs, we’re giving them an ideological one. So if separating kids


from their parents is about security, I’d like for someone to explain how making more enemies is going to make us more secure. From the beginning of humankind, people have migrated in large


groups. So, we have to figure out, are we going to confront this with war, and fight these people, and create more enemies, or are we going to figure out ways to incorporate them into our


society? If [Republicans] would drop this xenophobic, almost racist rhetoric, and say, “Listen, we want to make this country better. We are a country of immigrants,” we could become


stronger. We can’t just wave a sword at all of Latin America and say, “Send your kids here and see them be made an example of.” Save the sword-rattling for the people that need to be rattled


at, not for these kids. _This has been condensed and edited for clarity._