Tasting
the food that Suzi Hazahza cooked for him on that first Thursday in
November, Reza Barkhordari couldn't have been more joyful. He went to
Suzi's house every night after work, to sit with her whole family. And
each night, the wedding drew a day closer.
"We met at a local Middle Eastern coffee
shop in Richardson, Texas called the Al-Afrah," recalls Reza over the
telephone. "That's where I saw her for the first time, and it was
instant connection. It was so strong that Suzi's mother noticed and
helped in connecting the two of us. Shortly after that Suzi and I both
realized it was something that was meant to be and we would be
spending our whole lives together. That was on August 6, 2005."
"I proposed to her on August 6, 2006, our first anniversary. My mother
encouraged me to do it, and she sent a diamond ring to Suzi. We were
to be married over the Christmas holidays."
In preparation for the wedding, Reza invited the Hazahza family to
move closer to his home in Plano, where it would be easier to keep
everyone in daily contact. On the first Monday in November, they were
to close on a home in Frisco. What American dream could have seemed
more complete?
The first Friday of November, however, found Reza driving to the
Dallas offices of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in search
of the love of his life. Suzi and her entire family had been rounded
up at gunpoint.
There was father Radi, a 60-year-old refugee from Palestine -- a proud
provider who had seen better days as a banker in Jordan -- now working
as a state-certified car inspector. And mother Juma, the one who had
steered her daughter toward love, and who shared Suzi's delicate
preferences for freshly-cooked food.
There was sister Mirvat, a 24-year-old newlywed who still lived at
home because the religious rites for her marriage had not been
completed. She had graduated with honors from North Lake Community
College and was running the office of a local insurance agent.
There was brother Hisham, a 23-year-old sales whiz and prized manager
for a cell phone company who was moving rapidly from management into
ownership, on the verge of opening his own store. And there were
younger brothers Ahmad and Mohammad, ages 17 and 11.
Like two other Palestinian families in Dallas, all of them had been
rousted from bed at gunpoint and marched out the door in their
bedclothes. They were locked away, Reza was told. He could not see
Suzi on Friday.
On Saturday, Reza drove again to Dallas ICE, hoping to see Suzi and
her family. But no, that was impossible. Then on Sunday ICE gave Reza
a little hope. Suzi had been moved to the Rolling Plains Detention
Center in Haskell, Texas along with her two oldest brothers, her
sister, and her father. Visiting hours lasted until 4:00 pm. If Reza
could get there before 4:00, said ICE, then he could see Suzi.
Reza headed West in his car, calling a friend on his cell phone to get
directions as he drove into afternoon sun. It was already past noon,
and he had a four-hour drive in front of him. If he went just a little
bit faster, he could make it in time, and he did, pulling into the
immigration jail at 3:45 pm. But it would take ten minutes to get
Suzi, explained the guards. And despite Reza's begging, they told him
the visit would not be worth the trouble. Dejected, Reza drove back
home.
For the next five weekends Reza planned his visits to Haskell
carefully. He drove from Dallas on Friday night and visited with the
Hazahza men on Saturday. Then on Sunday he met his beloved Suzi.
One week he recalls Suzi came to the meeting with a fever and cough.
She explained that she tried to get medical help but without luck. So
Reza made some phone calls and complained. When Suzi's younger brother
reported blood in his urine, Reza called about that, too.
After making complaints to ICE, Reza completed his fifth week of
visits. He had no way of knowing that after the fifth visit, things
for Suzi would suddenly get worse. She called from Haskell begging her
fiancé never to come see her again.
After the fifth visit from Reza, Suzi Hazahza had been subjected to a
full body-cavity search.
To this day, Suzi Hazahza refuses all visitors. She will not see the
love of her life, Reza. She will not see her mother Juma, recently
released from the T. Don Hutto jail in Taylor, Texas. Nor will she see
her baby brother Mohammad who was released with Juma. She will not
risk another visitor because she is determined to never again let the
guards at Haskell prison search her like that again.
New York attorneys Joshua Bardavid and Ted Cox will return to Texas
next week to file federal habeas corpus motions in behalf of Suzi
Hazahza and her family. The motions they filed for the Ibrahim family
in early February worked very well, proving that ICE had no good
reason for taking them to jail. Not only were all the Ibrahims freed
from Hutto and Haskell both, but Juma and Mohammad Hazahza were also
freed from Hutto, two days before a press tour there.
In the coming weeks, as a protest movement grows around the issue of
children in prison, let us not forget that 20-year-old Suzi has been
wrongfully imprisoned, too. To quit the terror of Suzi Hazahza, she
and the rest of her family deserve to be immediately freed.
What is it like for Reza to think about Suzi these days? He takes a
call from her every night. Last night, he put her on the line with
Juma and Mohammad in order to continue this interview.
"You have to understand, this is not your standard strip search,"
explains Reza. "What they do makes her extremely uncomfortable." And
how did that chilling phone call from Suzi make him feel, when the
love of his life begged him to visit no more? "I felt like I was on
fire," he says. "There's so much pain. Just to be honest with you, I
am literally sick to my stomach."
And with each night's phone call from Haskell to Dallas, the marriage
of Reza and Suzi, the meant-to-be lovers, slips further away...
Greg Moses is editor of the
Texas
Civil Rights Review and author of
Revolution of Conscience: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Philosophy
of Nonviolence.
He can be reached
at: gmosesx@prodigy.net.
Other Articles by Greg
Moses
*
Immigration Policy Crosses Line of Common Decency
* The Words
of Mohammad, 11-Year-Old Prisoner
* Faith of
Ibrahim Redeemed: Texas Family Released from Hutto Prison
* Children
Without a Country: Maryam Remains in Texas Jail
* World
Responds to Family's Jailing Despite Media Silence
* Why This
War Cannot be a Failure: Dropping the F-word on the Endless War in
Iraq
* Globalized
Gulag: Palestinian Refugees and Children Held at Hutto Jail
* Habeas
Corpus Matters
*
Confronting the Violence of Dollar Hegemony
* New
Psycho-Management Reported at Maquiladoras
* CNAC's
Elite Agenda for the Border: Security, Temp Workers, and Oil
* A Little
Fascism Still Goes a Long Way
* Walkout in
Red, White, and Green: What America is Supposed to Feel Like
* Federation
of American Scientists Warns of Shift Toward Nuclear Preemption
*
Thanksgiving Delayed: Texas High Court Blesses Excellence and
Inequality
*
Nonviolence on Veterans Day?
* Falling
Back Another Hour in the State of Hate: Texans Ban Gay Marriage
* A
Movement Gathers Power on the Sorrow Plateau
* Mona in
the Field of Crosses at Camp Casey, TX
* How
Building a Saudi City Made a Lefty Out of Dick Underhill, VFP
* Dining
with the Posse (of Peace)
* Bush
Teaches Intelligent Design in Prison
* A Gold
Standard for Texas Education
*
Dylan's America
*
Pushing Back the Violence: Peacemaker Teams Get in the Way
* A Too
Convenient Crisis? Neo-Con Logic at the Border
*
Vigilante Wedge: Schwarzenegger Reprises Birth of a Nation
* Why I'm
Not Standing with Gringo Vigilantes
*
Legalizing Law Enforcement in the South Texas Drug Wars
* Growling
at Halliburton from the Belly of the Beast
* Taking
Jesus from the Hijackers
* Why are
the Rich Districts Helping the State Rush to Appeal the School Funding
Case?
* King and
the Christian Left
* Every
Hero a Killer? Not
* Getting
Real About the Draft
* Boot Up
America! Helmly Memo Leaks Bush’s New Deal
* Forty
Faxes & A Whisper: Texas Election Scandal
* Ask
Not Who Bankrolled Falluja
* The
One-Two Punch of Racism: Whitewashing the Voter Fraud Issue