Why a Scared 5-Year-Old Boy Shook Our National ConscienceWhat the image of Liam Ramos, grabbed in Minnesota and thrown in detention in Texas, means for our democracy.IT IS ONE OF THE INDELIBLE IMAGES OF MINNEAPOLIS: Liam Ramos, age 5, in his oversized bright blue bunny hat, being loaded onto a bus bound for a Texas detention facility 1,200 miles away. Many parents I know shared the image, picturing their own child, aghast that our government would do this to a little kid. I was shocked, too, when I first saw the image, tears welling up in my eyes. With his little Spider-Man backpack and the fuzzy pom-pom balls dangling from his hat, Liam looks so cute and so forlorn. His middle name is even Conejo, which means rabbit. It can all be too much. On the day he was photographed, January 20, Liam had been used by faceless, nameless DHS agents to capture his father at his preschool pickup; he was also being used as bait to see if the agents could ambush other members of the family. Rep. Rob Menendez (D-N.J.), gave a blistering speech on the House floor last week, castigating Republicans for their silence on Liam’s kidnapping, reading a devastating quote from Liam’s teacher Ella Sullivan: “He comes into class every day, and he just brightens the room. His friends haven’t asked about him yet, but I know that they’ll catch on.” What the kids will catch on to, Menendez said, is that Liam—and not violent criminals—is the real face of the people being taken from our communities. “My daughter is 5 and I live in Jersey City,” Menendez told me. He said Liam reminded him of his daughter’s classmates, or his neighbors walking around town holding their children’s hands. Liam’s innocence moves him, he said, and it horrifies him to think about what Liam’s “life is going to be like after this awful experience and the fact that our government—our government—is responsible for that.” The Washington Post’s art and architecture critic, Philip Kennicott, writing about the photo of Liam, asked if it had “the power to shock Americans into demanding an end to this cruelty?” The picture reminds us, Kennicott argues, that “childhood isn’t just about age”:
Kennicott goes on to argue that it is the weaponizing of compassion and decency that is so deeply unsettling about the image. “ICE didn’t place a box of candy or a $100 bill on the front stoop of the house, hoping to tempt people out,” he said. “They used a child to appeal to the most innate and essentially human impulse to show care, concern and protect—to capture those who care for him. They weaponized decency, the last incorruptible defense we have against absolute misery and evil.” Misery in TexasTO MAKE THE STORY EVEN MORE DISTURBING: Liam isn’t the only child or even the only 5-year-old jailed where he is now. Lawyer Eric Lee, who saw detainees with ashen faces when he went inside the Dilley, Texas detention center last week, told me his clients are dealing with bugs and dirt in their food, putrid water mixed with baby formula, and denial of medical care. Two clients he visited last week, a boy and a girl who are twins, turned 5 in the detention center. He explained that the 1997 Flores Settlement Agreement, which calls for kids to be treated humanely and for their release to be prioritized, says they can only be in detention for twenty days. The twin 5-year-olds, and their family members who are 9, 16, and 18, have been there for an appalling eight months, Lee said. As Lee waited, guards unceremoniously kicked him out, and that’s when he heard the protests from what sounded like hundreds of kids and parents, who risked likely retribution to yell “Libertad para los niños” and “Let us go!” “Those are children’s voices. So to every American who is watching, and watching those demonstrations, watching what this administration is doing—the effective attempt to establish a dictatorship in this country—if the kids who are in detention are risking their lives then what are you doing to stand up and fight for democracy today?” Lee asked on MS Now. In our interview he noted that a mother inside the detention center bravely spoke to the Associated Press last week, saying “The message we want to send is for them to treat us with dignity and according to the law. We’re immigrants, with children, not criminals.” She could be punished and separated from her own children. The stakes are unbearably high. “Liam has ignited something, but Liam is one of so many,” Lidia Terrazas, the Univision local reporter who covers the Dilley detention center, told me, noting that one-third of the detainees in the facility are children. Texas state representative Linda Garcia took part in actions on Wednesday to bring attention to what is happening to children at Dilley. She was joined by representatives from unions like the AFL-CIO, faith leaders, and advocacy groups like Mi Familia Vota. Later, she met with Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) for a community rally on the west side of San Antonio, a city that is two-thirds Latino. “I am a mother, I have a 9-year-old son, this completely paralyzed me, it stopped me dead in my tracks,” she told me of Liam’s kidnapping, stressing the need for solidarity now. Castro, who had long been planning to visit Dilley, gave seven days’ notice that he was going to visit in the days before Liam was taken. When he gave subsequent forty-eight-hour notice so he could meet with Liam while there, Castro was initially given the runaround because ICE said the detainee has to sign the form. “He’s a fucking 5-year-old kid and we’re going back and forth with them. . . . This is the bullshit this system is all about,” Castro told me. |