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Setbacks dampen holidays

A father is deported to Mexico, leaving his wife and two young sons, all U.S. citizens, on this side of the border.

By GINA PACE
Published December 11, 2006


photo
Marcelo Trujillo, right, is seen in this family photo with his son Jesus Trujillo, 4. The family lived together in Tommytown until Trujillo was deported Oct. 16.
[Times photo: Zach Boyden-Holmes]
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[Times photo: Zach Boyden-Holmes]
Andrew Trujillo, 5 months, sits on the lap of his mother, Rosaura Sanchez, 24, as she explains how her husband, Marcelo Trujillo, 30, was deported. Sanchez is a U.S. citizen, but it didn't help her husband to get a green card to work and stay in this country. Sanchez is now supporting and caring for the couple's two young sons.

DADE CITY - Rosaura Sanchez knows that this Christmas is going to be different.

She'll be with her two young sons. But her husband won't be there. He was deported to Mexico in October.

"To me it's not Christmas," she said. "It's like a regular day."

She said the holiday won't have the same meaning it used to when they were together. Sanchez, who is a nursing assistant in Zephyrhills, is working all the extra shifts she can to pay bills now that her husband's paycheck is gone. Expensive Christmas presents for her boys are out of the question.

So Sanchez will celebrate the holidays with only part of her family, like many others in Tommytown, a largely Hispanic community where many undocumented workers live.

"The depression and the whole thing of Christmas can get pretty bad," said Margarita Romo, the director of Farmworkers Self-Help, a nonprofit group in Dade City. "It's a very hard time for people who come here, and have left grandparents and uncles and aunts to try and make a better life."

* * *

Sanchez, 24, was born in Santa Ana, Calif., and is a U.S. citizen. She met her husband, Marcelo Trujillo, when she was 14. Her father, a soccer coach, had brought Trujillo to the house because he was one of his star players.

Trujillo, now 30, taught Sanchez to dance, and was her first dance partner at her quinceanera, a 15th birthday party that marks the transition from childhood to womanhood. In time, he would pass flowers under the dinner table to Sanchez and write her secret love notes.

Trujillo came to the United States in 1994. He stayed in the country illegally. He spent his time working on farms, picking anything from squash to oranges. Eventually, he got a job with a construction company in Crystal Springs doing asbestos abatement.

He married Sanchez in August 2002.

The couple tried to gain citizenship status for Trujillo, a long process that started in 2004, but couldn't.

Angela Kelley, the deputy director at the National Immigration Forum, an immigrants' rights organization, said that those who enter the United States illegally have very few options for gaining legal status. While it depends on the specifics of an individual's case, obtaining citizenship often becomes more difficult the longer someone is in the country illegally.

Only 5,000 visas are given in the service sector every year in the United States for jobs in restaurants, hotels and landscaping, Kelley said. Yet, about 500,000 immigrants cross the border illegally, she said, many eventually filling those types of jobs without legal status.

Chris Bentley, a spokesman for Citizenship and Immigration Services, said that marrying a U.S. citizen does not confer citizenship status. An illegal immigrant married to a citizen would still face repercussions for illegal entry.

In Trujillo's case, he faced those penalties when he tried to apply for citizenship, Sanchez said. He went for an interview Oct. 4 with immigration officials that Sanchez thought would lead to citizenship. But authorities were waiting to take him into custody instead. He was deported Oct. 16, she said. He is not to return for 10 years.

"The law is very tough and very unforgiving," Kelley said. "As undocumented people try and secure legal status, they run up against pretty immovable roadblocks to achieve what seems logical: a unified family structure."

* * *

Trujillo is now working in Mexico City, making $15 a day unloading trucks for a clothing vendor. He doesn't make enough money to help the family with bills, Sanchez says.

She doesn't know how she'll make ends meet on her own. Her son Andrew, who is 5 months old, was born premature and has respiratory problems that have required numerous trips to the doctor's office. This summer, son Jesus, who is 4, had his tonsils removed, and most of the family's savings went to pay for that, she said.

Sanchez said that Jesus knows that his father is gone, but doesn't understand why. After he talks to his father on the phone, he tells his mom he wants to go to Mexico.

But Sanchez doesn't see that as an option. She said it's almost impossible to get a good job there.

"This is my country," she said. "If I got to Mexico, my babies are not going to learn English and they are not going to have the opportunities that they have here."

So she's working on short-term goals and waiting for her tax refund so she can travel to visit Trujillo.

But it won't be in time for the holidays.

[Last modified December 10, 2006, 23:58:21]


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Comments on this article
by Trisha 12/12/06 11:04 PM
This is a sad and disturbing story! Why are they so stingy with visas but allow businesses to continually hire illegal immigrants?Yet If my husband had to go back to Ecuador I would go with him. Freedom and the pursuit of happiness are for everyone.
by Lisa 12/11/06 09:20 PM
Im also married to an illegal person. I meet him here in the U.S. And I think that when you marry an illegal alien they should gain citezenship. Why do Cuban have more rights than me a citezen? All it takes is them is to touch firm land.... And me??
by TacoBell 12/11/06 02:27 PM
Come here legally or don't come at all and by the way learn English while you are working your way through the legal process. There are enough people in this country that are suffering and we don't need to take care of a complete nation, Mexico!
by Candi 12/11/06 10:12 AM
go down dumb move for are state's who's going to by them? we will be just as poor here in the future as the other countries that are hurting, so I say take care of the american's and quit bringing in all these other perople help are own first.USA
by candi 12/11/06 10:07 AM
that Mexico is a poor state but wev are getting pretty poor here are self all are workers lost there job's becouse Mr Bush let GM make there cars in other countries now te jobs are gone who's going to buy one? The price on the cars and suv's didnt
by Ashley 12/11/06 10:05 AM
It's amazing that we complain about illegal aliens yet they are the ones who perform the jobs that everyone here (waiting in unemployment or on welfare) are too good to perform like picking strawberries or landscaping.
by Candi 12/11/06 10:04 AM
s for nothing but killing and inuring are young children. I think the world is about done here God is due think he's already here. Are USA is a mess. and we are over there showing them how to run a country when he can't run are's. Sure feel bad that
by Candi 12/11/06 09:57 AM
and stay on welfare for ever but the american's cant get a loaf of bread whenn there down and out living in boxe's and woods what's up with that Mr. Bush should have been fixing that problem instead of this awful war were in and billions of dolllers
by Candi 12/11/06 09:54 AM
starving here and homless why doesn't make the onwers that hire them give min. wage or do they and raise the prics or charge another 1 cent in taxes the one's that come over and get bridge cards get free collage medicaid , housing? That's not fair
by Michael 12/11/06 09:50 AM
This is to the person that reads these to see if they will be posted. Why do you not post all replies? I thought your rag promoted free speech, to enclude the ones that take no sympathy for your "tear jerker" articles. I care less about some Mexican
by Candi 12/11/06 09:49 AM
W awre all children of god and should be able to go anywaere, but the meican's and iranian's are really moving in in are city Saginw Michigan, And I don't beleive like Mr.Bush say's no american's want the jopb's there's people in the united states
by Maureen 12/11/06 09:40 AM
I think it is a sin the way we treat our imagrints. If our ancestors were treated this horribly we would not be here today. They at least had a chance to prove themselves before just being thrown out of the country. Let her husband back in.
by Jen 12/11/06 09:10 AM
While I can feel sympathy for this woman and kids, I do have to say one thing: There is a LEGAL PROCESS to immigrate to the US.
by Fred 12/11/06 08:49 AM
So like what? Mexico won't allow Americans to live there? The border only works one way? Need a ride?
by Laura 12/11/06 08:10 AM
Ironic that this story and the one about Mary Cheney having a child that won't have a father appear on the same day. If illegals work hard, stay out of trouble and have citizen spouses and children, Shouldn't there be a way to help them stay?
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