The
Diario de Sonora newspaper featured a front-page article on January 12 about
the families that live at the dump. The
headline read “We feel more forgotten than cold.” Tirabichi is less than a mile from the Hogar
de Esperanza y Paz (HEPAC) community center and I walked up there the next day. The high temperature that afternoon was 45
degrees and it dropped to 14 the following morning.
Arturo and the Molina brothers showed me
the shelters they had built and I can’t imagine what it would have been like
there that night. Arturo lived in Des
Moines, Iowa and his children are still in the U.S.
Manuel is 40 years old and he grew up in
the dump. He lived in Tucson for six
years, but the rest of his life has been there at Tirabichi.
The conversations and images from that day
stayed with me. I talked with Sandra and
Larry of the Tucson Samaritans, and Liz and Tricia who were visiting from
Montana, and I returned to Tirabichi with them on January 17. The intense cold had ended the day before and
the odor was more evident as we walked up the hill.
“We’re content because we’re able to work
here,” Teresa told me. “I only finished
elementary school and that’s why I’m here.”
She has four children between six and seventeen years old, and she’s
been working at the dump for six months.
The Clinton administration built a border
wall to separate Nogales, Sonora from Nogales, Arizona in 1994 (the same year
that the North America Free Trade Agreement was implemented). The Obama administration replaced it with a
larger wall in 2011 at a cost of four million dollars per mile. The people at Tirabichi live less than four
miles from where all that money was spent to keep them in poverty.
The HEPAC community center represents a
grassroots alternative to the policies of inequality and exclusion. A team from HEPAC was at Tirabichi when we
arrived there. They were inviting people
to send their children to the lunch program and to participate in the adult
education classes. Teresa had the flyer
and we talked about the opportunity to get her high school education at HEPAC.
Jesus and Maria on the site of their future home |