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NO OPTION BUT NORTH by Kelsey Freeman

NO OPTION BUT NORTH

The Migrant World and the Perilous Path Across the Border

by Kelsey Freeman

Pub Date: April 14th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-63246-097-4
Publisher: Ig Publishing

An earnest advocacy piece concerning the immigration crisis at the southern border.

Why do migrants travel north from Central America and Mexico to the U.S.? For many reasons, writes Freeman, a former Fulbright fellow in Mexico. Some have to do with economics, with migrants seeking better opportunities in the richer country instead of the $5.45 daily minimum wage in Mexico or the $0.37 in El Salvador. Many are forced to flee from gangs, drug cartels, and sex traffickers, groups that implicate everyone in a community, not just the foot soldiers. As the author notes, “these gangs run through the currents of everyday life, and efforts to avoid them are impossible.” Freeman is strong on sociological data and statistics. She also delivers meaningful portraits of migrants on the move from the vantage point of a shelter in central Mexico. In that business, no one’s hands are clean: One of the workers in that shelter, for example, is caught up in the human trafficking trade while many U.S. agents are nothing short of sadists, energized by Trumpian rhetoric. “If migration were actually a game,” writes Freeman in an apt passage, “it would be a life and death affair where ‘winning’ meant boarding a moving train without getting maimed, killed or assaulted. And the prize for winning would be to be sent home in handcuffs, only to have to play again and again.” Parts of the narrative are less graceful than all that, and too often the story is about the author and not the migrants. Her criticism of writers who have committed “the sort of immersion journalism that pretends that observing the migration phenomenon doesn’t affect it” is unfortunate given her too-frequent presence in the narrative as more than just narrator. For a clearer, more memorable portrait of “the twisted knot of migration,” readers should turn to Kathryn Ferguson’s The Haunting of the Mexican Border (2015) instead.

An intermittently insightful but marginal addition to the literature on the immigration crisis.