Discover the Untold Stories of Migrants on the Border: Clothing Collection and Assistance by Marco Antonio González

2023-09-25 00:20:21

Marco Antonio González used to fish in the Río Grande, on the border between Mexico and the United States, but with the arrival of hundreds of migrants daily he saw another way to make a living on the banks.

“Once while fishing I found 100 dollars that came in a bag, I started coming. And since now here all over the street there are a lot of clothes (…) I stay here,” she said.

The 37-year-old Mexican collects the clothes that migrants leave when crossing the river, which is the last obstacle that hundreds of thousands face each month to reach US territory, and takes them to a shelter on the border Piedras Negras, where in exchange receives food.

READ ALSO: Operation of Mexican trains used by migrants to reach the US is suspended.

On the American side, the conservative government of Texas has covered a good part of the shore with a dense tangle of barbed wire to limit access for migrants, who continue to arrive en masse daily.

Many abandon the few belongings they have left on this shore following thousands of kilometers of road from countries like Venezuela, Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.

It is the daily bread for González and others who, like him, cross the river daily to collect what they can from the American side.

“It has become a way of life for people who live on the border,” an Operation Lone Star officer stationed in Texas said anonymously.

“In Brownsville and other cities you see them, they come and look for things to sell or trade. Some make a living from this, although others do it to help other migrants who have nothing,” said the cashier as the followingnoon fell in Eagle Pass.

“You need more than one”

“I’ve been doing this for regarding four years now,” González said just following collecting the clothes that a group of regarding thirty people left when changing on the shore following crossing the river.

A young man, who had gone to the water shortly before to help others cross, accused him of stealing his backpack and cried because it contained his phone and his identification document.

González denied it and let him look through his bag of clothes.

Marco Antonio González used to fish in the Rio Grande, the natural border between the United States and Mexico, until he found another way to earn a living amid the arrival of hundreds of migrants daily to these shores. (Photo: AFP)

“They think I’m this, I’m that,” he said. “On the contrary, I am here to help.”

The man, who knows the river and its capricious currents, says that many also accuse him of passing migrants from bank to bank.

“Nothing, sometimes I have to help them because their children are drowning.”

“Several people have drowned here. (…) Also sometimes the police hit them and throw them away,” he said, referring to the Mexican side.

Father of three, González sees dozens of migrants on the streets of Piedras Negras every day. There is no shortage of demand, he says. One man’s trash is another’s treasure, is his mantra.

“I don’t like to see things that are going to waste,” he says, pointing around him, where T-shirts and pants still hang from the barbed wire. “Because there are people who are more in need than you.”

READ ALSO: Ferromex cargo trains resume operation in Mexico following suspension due to migrants

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