The
night before his five-day walk to protest immigrant prisons of the Rio
Grande Valley, Jay Johnson-Castro drove to Los Fresnos to get an
advance glimpse of International Educational Services, Inc. (IES).
“Where’s the school?” he asked, as a
guard approached him in the parking lot.
“What school?” said the guard, explaining that IES was a detention
center for “young adults” whose mothers were being held at the nearby
Port Isabel Immigrant Detention Center.
When Johnson-Castro explained that he was against prisons for
children, the guard replied that IES wasn’t really a prison.
“Can they go to the mall?” asked Johnson-Castro.
“No,” replied the guard.
“Can they go to the theater?”
“No,” again.
“Can they dress the way they want to?”
For the third time, “no.”
“If they can’t get out,” Johnson-Castro asked the guard, “what do you
think it is?”
On his walks Wednesday and Thursday, Johnson-Castro heard from local
folks that the IES facility holds about 100 boys and 60 girls who have
been picked up with -- and separated from -- immigrant parents. If the
children turn 18 years old they are transferred to an adult jail.
“One source who has been inside told us there could be worse places
for the children,” said Johnson-Castro. “At least they are fed and
clothed. But they are also very sad because they are not free. They
are prisoners.”
“IES was the forerunner to the T. Don Hutto prison camp in Taylor,
Texas,” explains Johnson-Castro. “They built Hutto in order to keep
the children with their mothers, but IES is still here, still holding
children separately. We still have the problem that Hutto was supposed
to fix.”
Inside are Mexican children arrested near the Mexico border, but also
a child from Brazil, and one from Korea. One source reported seeing a
16-year-old girl pregnant. When did the girl get pregnant? Who is able
to speak Portuguese or Korean?
“We keep unfolding things,” says Johnson-Castro. “The more we ask, the
more we have to ask.” For example, why are there sixty cars in a
parking lot outside a prison for 160 children? If IES is not a school
inside, what kind of education is being provided? If activists are
troubled by the imprisonment of children at Hutto, why are they not
raising issues about IES?
An Internal Revenue Service Form 990 posted online in pdf format shows
that IES had a budget of $5.6 million dollars in 2004. As far as
Johnson-Castro is concerned, the budget is what drives the operation.
“Sixty cars and 160 kids?” he asks. “There are a lot of families
dependent for their livelihood on the imprisonment of children. And
the cost of all this is that we lose our morality and conscience when
we imprison children or any human being for money. And who wants it
that way? The people who profit want it that way -- not the rest of
us.”
As with his walk to the Rolling Plains prison of Haskell, Texas,
Johnson-Castro was treated to a police escort on the first day of his
walk. First, the Brownsville Police, then Los Fresnos police. And on
the second day, when Johnson-Castro completed the walk from IES to the
Port Isabel Immigrant Detention Center, he found swarms of mosquitoes
and a half dozen federal cars waiting for him at a blockaded gate.
The protest walker had been walking alone all day, without a single
reporter or photographer. But there were three cars that had fallen in
behind the truck of John Neck who always follows Johnson-Castro to
keep him protected from traffic. So the feds had the protesters
outnumbered.
“Don’t tell me you did all this for us,” said Johnson-Castro to a
federal guard at the Port Isabel gate.
“Yes, we did, sir,” replied the guard.
“Well, I’m complimented. One guy walking alone.”
“Anytime you have something like this we have to take precautions. You
can’t go in there.”
“No way I want to go in there willingly. I’m here to bring attention
to you. This may not look like a real big event, but before you know
it, what’s happening here will be known. Do you know why we’re here?”
“Yes sir, I’ve been told.”
That’s when Johnson-Castro reminded the guard, there was a time when
it was legal to buy and sell human beings. “This is just a 21st
Century version,” explained Johnson-Castro, the man that the Rio
Grande Guardian calls Quixotic. In place of plantations we now have
prisons. And it’s all done for profit.
“Can I talk to the prisoners?”
“No sir.”
“Can the media talk to the prisoners?” (A Quixotic question today.)
“No sir.”
“So where are the freedoms of speech or press? Where are these
inalienable rights guaranteed by the Constitution? And why are these
rights being denied to these people in a country that is supposed to
be free?”
When the guard deferred the question as something that should be
addressed to other federal officials at another time, Johnson-Castro
replied: “This includes you.”
Not far from the prison gate at Port Isabel is a housing development
for federal guards in training, but for reasons unknown the guards
don’t live there now. Nobody does. The houses are all boarded up with
plywood.
For Johnson-Castro and his friend John Neck, the empty houses are a
sure sign of what’s not being done right. Locked up in the immigrant
prisons are painters, landscapers, and carpenters. “Give us this place
for the immigrants who are now in prison, and we’ll make a city out of
this.”
On Friday, day three, Johnson-Castro and John Neck take their steady
caravan into Harlingen on their way toward the infamous Raymondville
tent city prison camp, where they plan to arrive for a 1:00 pm vigil
on Sunday. The walk did get advance coverage on KGBT-TV, so the people
of Harlingen should be prepared for what they are about to see.
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
* Are They
Holding Suzi Hazahza for Profit? Lessons from the Road to Hell
* Honk for
Suzi's Freedom: The Hazahzas in Haskell Hell
* Habeas
Writ for Hazahza Family Details Allegations of Serious Abuses
* The Terror
of Suzi Hazahza: Why Her Family Must be Freed
*
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