A way of despair has engulfed the migrant camp of La Soledad, named after the colonial-era church that towers over the shantytown in downtown Mexico Metropolis.
It was purported to be a short lived cease, a spot to regroup and anticipate the best second to proceed on towards the US.
Then President Trump issued decrees that successfully shut down migration alongside the U.S.-Mexico border, leaving tens of hundreds of migrants marooned in camps, shelters and different lodging throughout Mexico, from the southern hinterlands to the Rio Grande.
Despondent and broke — many bought properties, borrowed money, paid smugglers and left youngsters behind in pursuit of the American dream — they now face an existential reckoning: What subsequent?
“There’s great uncertainty right now,” mentioned Manuela Pérez Jerónimo, a 47-year-old from Guatemala who was roasting potatoes over charcoal. “No one knows anything. Will we be able to cross the border? Will we all get deported?”
The Occasions spoke to a few of the 1,500 or so denizens of La Soledad as they weighed their three primary choices: flip again, wait and see, or push on.
Giving up the dream
There isn’t a census, and migrants come and go, however the majority of individuals in La Soledad seem like from Venezuela, the once-wealthy South American nation that has seen an exodus of greater than 7 million amid an financial, social and political crackup.
“It became impossible to make a living,” mentioned Jormaris Figuera Fernández, 42, talking exterior a shack of plywood planks and a tarpaulin cover that she shares together with her husband.
The 2 left Venezuela six years in the past, at first becoming a member of legions of fellow residents in neighboring Colombia, the place the couple labored in development, within the espresso fields and different jobs. They later tried their luck in Brazil and Chile, earlier than returning to Colombia.
Then in 2023 they set out for the US, a dangerous journey that started within the Darién Hole, the unforgiving strip of rainforest between Colombia and Panama.
“We heard a lot of people were crossing the jungle — even some with crutches, very overweight people, pregnant women,” mentioned Figuera. “We figured we could do it too.”
It took six weeks to achieve Mexico. For greater than a 12 months, Figuera cleaned homes within the southern state of Chiapas whereas her husband labored within the fields.
The 2 ultimately made their technique to Mexico Metropolis, paying about $200 for his or her shanty in La Soledad. It contains a mattress, a sofa, throw rugs, a desk and a scorching plate that, like different home equipment within the camp, runs off pirated electrical energy. It prices about 25 cents every time they use the restroom in a close-by bar.
However Figuera and her husband remained, hopeful of gaining authorized entry — not like her son, who, she mentioned, was twice caught crossing the border illegally, spent 4 months in U.S. custody and is now in New York awaiting a deportation listening to.
“He said it’s very hard, very cold, and extremely difficult to find work without papers,” Figuera mentioned.
Confronted with Trump’s shut-the-border dictates, the couple has relented: They plan to return to Colombia — as soon as they work out a technique to get there.
“We came here with a dream, with a purpose — to arrive to the United States to help our families,” Figuera mentioned, tears welling in her eyes. “We are going back now with nothing. Depressed. Deflated. We have failed.”
Ready and seeing
The 2 boys, aged 2 and 4, romped by the labyrinth of La Soledad, underneath strains of drying laundry, previous deliverymen pushing stacked handcarts and carpenters hammering away at tottering buildings.
“It’s not a great place for kids,” mentioned their mom, Alexandra Roa, 21, standing in entrance of the household’s plywood-and-plastic dwelling.
They’ve been in Mexico for seven months.
“We are disillusioned, desperate,” mentioned Roa, who left Venezuela at age 16, settling in Chile for a number of years earlier than heading towards the US. “I try to distract myself. But at times I begin to cry and cry.”
Fueling her nervousness are experiences of mass deportations, separations of households and navy deployments alongside the U.S. border.
“We don’t want to take the risk of going to the border and then something really bad happens,” Roa mentioned.
She and her husband have determined to attend and see what occurs, a minimum of for a number of months. He has discovered work downtown lugging heavy merchandise, pocketing about $10-$15 a day.
She mentioned she prays that some spectral power or unbelievable pang of conscience will “touch the heart” of Trump.
Her two children wandered again. It was lunch hour in La Soledad, the air punctuated with the rhythm of cumbia and salsa blaring from increase containers.
Pushing on
“It was like someone took a pail of ice water and dumped it on my head,” mentioned Dixon Camacho.
He was recalling Jan. 20, Inauguration Day, when phrase filtered again to La Soledad that Trump had ditched the cellphone utility often known as CBP One, which greater than 900,000 migrants have used to make appointments with U.S. border brokers and legally enter the US.
After months of ready, Camacho had scored a cherished appointment in El Paso for Feb. 4. Now it was canceled.
“I was left without words, with fear, anger, frustration,” mentioned Camacho, 50, who leaned on a sofa in a form of open-air front room in La Soledad. “I wondered: ‘What now? Where do I go? What do I do?’”
A widower, he’s the daddy of six youngsters — grownup little children in Ecuador, Brazil and Argentina, and a pair of youngsters who stay in Venezuela.
He was a transport dispatcher in Venezuela, incomes sufficient to care comfortably for his household — and as soon as even taking a lavish trip in Brazil.
“Now, we Venezuelans are the poor ones,” mentioned Camacho, who sported a Chicago Bulls cap and jacket in honor of Michael Jordan — although his jacket bears No. 22, not Jordan’s well-known 23.
He left Venezuela in January 2024, intending to affix a brother in Texas.
On two events, Camacho hopped freight trains to the Mexican border state of Chihuahua, putting him on the verge of coming into the US — solely to be detained by Mexican immigration brokers, who bused him again to southern Mexico.
Settling in Mexico just isn’t an choice, Camacho insisted, although the Trump administration plans to ship asylum seekers arriving on the border again to Mexico to await U.S. adjudication of their circumstances.
“In Mexico you basically earn enough to live,” mentioned Camacho. “I haven’t been able to send a single peso back to my kids, my mother.”
He plans to hit the rails north once more, even when it means crossing the border illegally. He mentioned he and his mates from La Soledad had been mapping out a route.
“We’re all like family here,” Camacho mentioned. “I’m ready to go right now.”
Quickly, he mentioned, they might be on their method, undeterred by partitions, barbed wire, troops and presidential decrees.