What does a little boy do when he’s been separated from his dad and is surrounded by strangers? He cries out for him, over and over.
“Papa! Papa! Papa!”
This little boy has been crying out for a long time. You can hear it in his sobs, those gasping sobs that children make when they’ve worn themselves out with tears. But the boy keeps crying, because he’s all on his own, and frightened.
“Papa! Papa! Papa!”
He just wants his dad to rush in and pick him up in his big strong arms and make everything okay again. But that’s not going to happen.
The unidentified little boy is believed to be one of 10 Central American children separated from their parents at the US/Mexico border last week. The investigative website ProPublica has published a recording of the children’s voices, which they say was secretly made at a detention facility when the children had been separated from their parents for less than 24 hours.
They say the recording was made by someone who heard the crying and was “devastated” by it.
Since April, more than 2000 children have been separated from their parents at the border. That’s when Donald Trump began enforcing the “zero tolerance” policy. If any adult, even an asylum seeker, crosses the border illegally with a child, the adult is sent to jail and the child is put into government care.
The little boy crying out for his dad sounds very young. Maybe he doesn’t know many words apart from “papa”. Other children are also wailing, or calling out, “Mami!”