Together at last: A migrant family’s arduous path to reunification

When U.S. immigration officials took away Maria Hernandez’s daughters at the U.S.-Mexico border and deported her in 2017, she feared she would never see them again.

Portrait of Maria Hernandez

Maria Hernandez is seen at her home in Honduras while she waits for her immigration case approval to reunite with her daughters. Photo by Carlos Barria / Reuters

Maria Hernandez’s daughters are among thousands of children who were separated from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border under a Trump administration policy known as "zero tolerance." Reuters has followed their family since mid-2020.

Children separated from family during the Trump administration

3,951 immigrant children

In three and a half years, between July 1, 2017 and January 20, 2021, 3,951 children were separated from their parents at the U.S. Mexico border.

Many parents were placed in U.S. detention or deported back to their countries of origin while their children were sent to government shelters around the U.S.

On Feb. 2, 2021, the Biden administration set up an Interagency Task Force to fully account for the separations and reunify children still separated from their parents or legal guardians.

The task force identified 2,187 children who already had been reunified with their parents or legal guardians during the Trump administration in response to court orders and efforts by non-governmental organizations.

However, 1,764 children remained separated.

The task force publishes a progress report on its work every 60 days. According to the latest report, published Nov. 29, 2021, there were:

280 children

No contact information available and reunification status unknown

1,217 children

Contact information available but not yet reunified

These are typically children whose parents have been located but have not begun the reunification process.

The next report is set to be released in early February.

As of Jan. 25, 2022 according to the Department of Homeland Security, there were:

377 children

In the process of reunification

Since the task force began its work almost one year ago, 126 children have been reunited with their parents.

Maria’s two daughters are among them.

On a Tuesday in January, four years after American authorities pried Maria Hernandez away from her daughters and deported her back to Honduras, she returned to the United States - this time with the blessing of the U.S. government.

At the Los Angeles International Airport, Nicole, now 7, greeted her mother with a single red rose. Michelle, nearly a teenager, hung back with a bouquet of roses and sunflowers. When Hernandez turned towards her, Michelle rushed into her embrace, sobbing.

“I was far away but always thinking of you,” Hernandez whispered to her daughters.

Hernandez had last held Nicole when she was 3 years old; Michelle was 8. Days after Christmas in 2017, the mother had clung to her weeping girls at a border patrol station in Arizona before a U.S. official pulled them apart, Hernandez said.

The trio had crossed into the United States in search of asylum. Once apprehended, Hernandez said, she was given an impossible choice: Leave the country, either with the girls or without them. Rattled by recent threats to Michelle from Honduran gangs, Hernandez decided the girls would be safer in the United States, she said.

The sisters were sent to a children’s shelter in California and eventually released to live with their brother Maynor, now 34, who earns a living selling oranges in Los Angeles. Hernandez was deported, one of thousands of parents separated from their children under then-President Donald Trump’s controversial “zero tolerance” policy to deter illegal immigration. Reuters is referring to the girls by their middle names to protect their privacy.

Maria Hernandez walks through the banana plantation where she worked in Honduras in June 2021.
Hernandez  talks to her daughter during a video call from Honduras and sees the girl is missing a tooth.
Hernandez is reflected in a rear view mirror as she rides to the Honduran banana plantation where she works.
Top: Maria Hernandez arrives to work at a banana plantation in northwest Honduras in June 2021; she is waiting for U.S. approval to reunite with her family in California. Left: Hernandez keeps up to date with her family via a video call from Honduras. Her younger daughter tells her she recently lost a tooth. Right: Hernandez was separated from her two daughters and deported after crossing into the United States without authorization during the Trump administration. Photos by Carlos Barria / Reuters
Top: Maria Hernandez arrives to work at a banana plantation in Honduras; she is waiting for U.S. approval to reunite with her family in California. Bottom: Hernandez keeps up to date with her family on a June 2021 video call with her younger daughter who recently lost a tooth. Photos by Carlos Barria / Reuters

Over the years, Hernandez tried to bridge the 2,800 mile (4,500 km) gap between them with near daily video calls, studying their faces on a smartphone screen and listening to their stories. Nicole reported losing a tooth; Michelle confessed her crushes.

On her first night in the United States, Hernandez shared a bed with her daughters, gazing at them as they slept and marveling at how much they had grown.

“So many years without seeing them,” she said to Reuters this month, her voice shaky from crying. “They are so big now.”

‘A HUMAN TRAGEDY’

The Trump administration contended that allowing families to be released together in the United States while they applied for asylum only encouraged illegal immigration. In response, the administration sought to prosecute and deport parents like Hernandez and place their children in U.S. custody as “unaccompanied minors.”

But traumatic family separations, which began in 2017 before any official announcement, were captured in the media worldwide and caused international outcry. Trump, a Republican, reversed course with an executive order ending the practice in June 2018.

Jeff Sessions, an attorney general under Trump and the force behind “zero tolerance,” defended the strategy in an interview with Reuters last March, saying a person crossing the border illegally with a child “shouldn’t be given immunity.” However, he expressed regret for the separations.

Maynor, a Honduran immigrant,  carries his sister in a backyard near a small playground with other kids.
Maynor sorts through an enormous pile of oranges that fill the bed of his pickup truck.
Left: Maynor, now 34, carries his sister at his home in California in September 2020; they are waiting for their mother to be able to legally enter the United States. Photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters Right: Maynor works near a small shopping center as he drives around California selling oranges from the back of his truck during the summer of 2021. Photo by Mike Blake / Reuters
Maynor, now 34, carries his sister at his home in California in September 2020, while waiting for his mother to be able to enter the United States. Photo by Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

President Joe Biden, a Democrat who took office in January 2021, called family separations a “human tragedy” and quickly formed a task force to reunify families. Deported parents, once found, would be given the option to return to the United States to rejoin their children, who mostly had stayed with U.S. relatives or sponsors.

The task force identified more than 3,900 children separated at the U.S.-Mexico border after July 2017 under “zero tolerance” and related policies. More than half were reunified during the Trump administration as a result of litigation by migrant advocates. That left about 1,700 children still separated.

As of Jan. 25, the Biden task force had reunited 126 kids with their parents or legal guardians. About 377 more - from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Brazil, and Venezuela - have reunifications in progress, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Setting up a process to bring back parents who were deported to countries across Latin America took months, in part because of the Trump administration’s incomplete and shoddy record-keeping, the task force said. A spokeswoman for Trump did not respond to a request for comment.

To aid the task force, the Biden administration created the websites Together.gov and Juntos.gov, where families can register for reunification.

The administration is “dedicated to finding every family and ensuring families have long-term stability in the United States,” said Michelle Brane, the head of the task force in a statement.

Still, some families have been left frustrated, even distraught, at the slow pace of reunifications, according to migrant advocates.

“We are talking about people who haven’t seen their kids in three or four years,” said Hernandez’s lawyer Carol Anne Donohoe, who manages the Family Reunification Project at the non-profit immigrant advocacy group based at the U.S.-Mexico border Al Otro Lado.

“Why are you making them jump through these hoops?,” she said. “Any question you ask these parents is extremely traumatizing, because they are panicking and thinking ‘Oh no, I am not going to get back.’”

Maria Hernandez and her grandson are silhouetted in an airport terminal window as a tiny airplane flies in the cloudy sky behind them.
The city of Los Angeles is seen from far above through an airplane window.
Maria Hernandez’s grandson Aron looks out through the window as they travel from Honduras to California to reunite with their family.
Top: Maria Hernandez travels with her grandson through the George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston on the way to reunite with her daughters in California in January 2022 . Left: Maria Hernandez and her grandson Aron arrive in Los Angeles. Photos by Carlos Barria / Reuters Right: Maria Hernandez’s grandson Aron looks out through the window as they travel from Honduras to California to reunite with their family. Photo by Jose Cabeza / Reuters
Top: Maria Hernandez and her grandson Aron arrive in Los Angeles. Photo by Carlos Barria / Reuters Bottom: Hernandez’s grandson Aron looks out through the window as they travel from Honduras to California to reunite with their family. Photo by Jose Cabeza / Reuters

TIPS FROM TAXI DRIVERS

It fell to Honduran attorney Dora Melara to search for Hernandez.

Melara was enlisted in early 2020 by the New York-based advocacy organization Justice in Motion, as part of the lawsuit against the U.S. government brought by the American Civil Liberties Union.

Melara had only an incomplete name and location for Hernandez from a U.S. government list of parents and guardians who had been separated from their children at the border. She had no contact information for Hernandez’s daughters.

The Honduran lawyer took three trips over weeks to a gang-ridden town in northern Honduras near the city of San Pedro Sula. She traveled only during the day to be safe.

Thanks in part to tips from local taxi drivers, she found Hernandez in March 2020. By the time she showed up on Hernandez’s doorstep, manila folder in hand, the Honduran mother was so desperate to see her daughters that she was contemplating another attempt at crossing the border, this time with a migrant caravan.

When Hernandez found out she could apply to rejoin her girls after Biden took office, she was overjoyed. But what followed was months of delay.

“I gave all the information I could, but then time just passed and I didn’t get any messages. I felt like I was never going to see my daughters again,” Hernandez said.

Complicating her case was her petition to travel with her now 4-year-old grandson, Aron, who was in her care and would need his own passport and other permissions to leave Honduras.

By October 2021, she had filed applications for “humanitarian parole” for herself and her grandson to enter the United States, her lawyers said. Approval came weeks later, in December. Then Aron came down with dengue fever, pushing back their travel date past Christmas.

Finally, in early January, Hernandez was told to pack her bags, take a COVID-19 test and head for the local airport with Aron.

Maria Hernandez and her grandson descend the escalator and see her family for the first time in years at the Los Angeles International Airport.
Hernandez and her family pose for a group portrait.
Hernandez cries as she hugs her daughter and holds a bouquet of flowers. Her son stands in the background and wipes tears from his eyes.
Left: Maria Hernandez and her grandson descend the escalator and see her family for the first time in years at the Los Angeles International Airport. Right: Hernandez poses with her daughter, son and close family members during their reunification at Los Angeles International Airport. Bottom: Hernandez hugs her daughter Michelle during their reunification with Hernandez’s son Maynor and younger daughter Nicole. Photos by Carlos Barria / Reuters
Top: Maria Hernandez poses with her daughter, son and other family members during their reunification at Los Angeles International Airport. Bottom: Hernandez hugs her daughter Michelle during their reunification with her son Maynor and young daughter Nicole. Photos by Carlos Barria / Reuters

A NEW START

After the two travelers landed in Los Angeles, the family made their way to Maynor’s one-bedroom apartment. The girls stayed out of school the next day to help their mom with the mundane tasks of building a new life in the United States: getting a cell phone, enrolling Aron in school, looking for a bigger place to live.

Under humanitarian parole in the United States, Hernandez is entitled to a work permit and is protected from deportation for three years, but she has no clear path to a permanent legal status.

Hernandez stands in a doorway to an empty apartment and her family can be seen through the venetian blinds.
Hernandez serves dinner to her younger daughter Nicole and her grandson Aron as her older daughter stands in a doorway.  Caption2: Hernandez serves dinner to her younger daughter Nicole and her grandson Aron as her older daughter stands in the next room. Photos by Carlos Barria / Reuters
Left: Hernandez walks through the doorway of a potential new apartment for rent after being reunited with her daughters in Los Angeles. Right: undefined
Top: Hernandez walks through the doorway of a prospective apartment after being reunited with her daughters in Los Angeles.

The Biden administration recently pulled out of settlement talks with hundreds of families who had sued the government seeking compensation for costs and suffering allegedly caused by separations. Some Republican lawmakers raised an outcry over the potential for high payouts.

In 2019, however, a federal judge ruled that separated families are entitled to some mental health services at no cost.

A November 2021 study by the nonprofit Physicians for Human Rights found that parents and children forcibly separated at the border endured severe psychological trauma, including confusion and panic, depression, frequent crying and nightmares. Symptoms can linger even after reunification, the clinicians found.

For Michelle, it has been hard to talk to others about what she’s gone through.

“All the problems, I kept it to myself because it’s weird telling a teacher or a friend or somebody, because maybe they will not understand you or they will just feel bad about you,” she said after spending her first day with her mother.

Speaking in fluent English, Michelle said she tried to be strong for kid sister Nicole who became sad when she saw other schoolchildren with their mothers.

“I said ‘some day you will be like that, someday you will be with your mom.’”

"The past is the past," she added. "Now that my mom is here, I want to make new memories."

Maria and her family walk abreast down the street, holding hands.
Maria and her reunited family walk down a busy street in Los Angeles. Photo by Carlos Barria / Reuters
Sources

U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)

By

Mica Rosenberg

Photos

Carlos Barria

Graphic

Ally J. Levine

Additional reporting

Ted Hesson in Washington D.C. and Laura Gottesdiener in Honduras

Additional photos

Jose Cabezas in Honduras, Lucy Nicholson and Mike Blake in Los Angeles

Production work

Ally J. Levine and Travis Hartman

Edited by

Kristina Cooke, Julie Marquis and Julia Wolfe