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Illegal Border Crossing

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Morocco
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Mexican theme park turns border crossing into sport

Aug. 23, 2006 12:00 AM

IXMIQUILPAN, Mexico - On a misty, moonless night, the group scurried down the canyon wall, their feet slipping in the ankle-deep mud. The sirens grew louder as their guide, clad in a ski mask and known only as Poncho, urged them to run faster. "Hurry up! The Border Patrol is coming!"

A couple in matching designer tennis outfits loped awkwardly along, the boyfriend clutching a digital video camera and struggling to keep the screen steady.

The 20 or so people fleeing the Border Patrol aren't undocumented immigrants. They're tourists about 700 miles from the border. Most are well-heeled professionals more likely to travel to the United States in an airplane than on foot. advertisement

They've each paid 150 pesos, or about $15, for what is perhaps Mexico's strangest tourist attraction: a night as an undocumented immigrant crossing the Rio Grande.

Advertising for the mock journey, which takes place at a nature park in the central state of Hidalgo, tells the pretend immigrants to "Make fun of the Border Patrol!" and to "Cross the border as an extreme sport!"

The organizers say they are trying to build empathy for migrants by putting people in their shoes.

And the organizers, members of a Hnahnu indigenous community, speak from experience. Leaders estimate as many as 90 percent of the 2,500-person community have made the journey to the United States, most ending up in the boomtown of Las Vegas.

"We do this to show the people what it's like, to make them more conscious," said Hnahnu elder Luis Santiago Hernandez, who has crossed more than five times. Santiago said that although they try to make the experience authentic, "it's not even 10 percent of the real thing."

The trip also seeks to educate participants on Hnahnu culture and represents a source of income for the community, leaders said. The Mexican government helped finance the creation of the Eco Alberto nature park.

Participants said they were lured by the realistic experience promised by the nearly six-hour nocturnal walk.

"It was like being in their flesh and bones," marveled Oswaldo Martinez, 31, of Cuernavaca.

"It was cool. It was very fun," gushed his friend Mauricio Palacios, 30. "I never imagined it would be like that."

Until almost 2 a.m., the group scaled walls, hid in tunnels, jumped on the back of pickup trucks and followed a path through a cornfield. The trip ended with a ride in blindfolds to a Hnahnu holy place where Poncho, whose name is Alfonso Martinez Flores, asked the group to be more honest and sincere in their lives.

Word of the tourist attraction has provoked much head-scratching among immigrant advocates in the United States and real-life immigrants who have made the trek across the border.

Some called the risk-free adrenaline rush insulting. Others said it could improve the often-conflicted attitudes of Mexicans toward their compatriots who migrate.

"Anything that raises awareness in Mexico of the plight of undocumented immigrants is welcome," said Jorge Bustamante, special Mexican representative to the U.N. for human rights of migrants. "But the indifference is very strong, and it's greater as you ascend in social class."

Maria Garcia, a Mexican immigrant who founded the Hispanic Community Support Center in Duluth, Ga., said the mock crossing could be perceived as exploiting the suffering of migrants. "Someone crossing the border knows they could die," she said. "Someone going on this tour knows they will have fun."

Immigrant rights advocate Josefina Castillo, director of the Austin American Friends Service Committee office in Texas, said the adventure should include dialogue about the economic reasons immigrants leave home. "If it's just part of a show, then it would be (insulting)," she said. "It should lead to more education."

Nearly 70 members of the Hnahnu community take part in the experience, playing the various roles.

"It's all the things we've been through," said 21-year-old Juventino Garcia, who made his first journey north at 15. "We're just trying to show the people what it's like."

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/082...mepark0823.html

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Brazil
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is that some kind of training program?

Did you read the article? PS I know your comment was a joke... in bad taste.

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Morocco
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is that some kind of training program?

Did you read the article? PS I know your comment was a joke... in bad taste.

Well, the whole idea is in poor taste, is it not?

I wonder when Six Flags will put in the "Trail of Tears" ride... :wacko:

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Algeria
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that was my point... theme park idea in bad taste gets bad rap...

just like jenn said about the trail of tears theme park idea.. or how about montgomery bus boycott reality rides...

it is like they are almost encouraging illegal border crossing.

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Filed: Country: Guatemala
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is that some kind of training program?

Did you read the article? PS I know your comment was a joke... in bad taste.

Well, the whole idea is in poor taste, is it not?

I wonder when Six Flags will put in the "Trail of Tears" ride... :wacko:

I think the difference is that this isn't some historical event that happened a long time ago that people are re-enacting...this is the way of life for a lot of Mexicans, here and now. They're spreading awareness among those in other classes down there, that this is what is happening to the lowest of the low. Something about it doesn't particularly sit well with me, as in I can't see what good it's really going to accomplish, and I think they should be spending more time trying to fix the problems then spread awareness, and I agree to a certain extent it is in poor taste-the extent to which it exploits the suffering of those at the bottom for the entertainment of the rich.

Don't let the sunshine spoil your rain...just stand up and COMPLAIN!

-Oscar the Grouch

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Brazil
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is that some kind of training program?

Did you read the article? PS I know your comment was a joke... in bad taste.

Well, the whole idea is in poor taste, is it not?

I wonder when Six Flags will put in the "Trail of Tears" ride... :wacko:

Nevermind, I just feel like the idea is in poor taste in yet a different way than Icey's comment. But whatever, I'm too tired to articulate what I'm trying to say.

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Filed: Country: Guatemala
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And I seriously doubt it will encourage any extra border crossings-the type that go to these things don't need (or want) to cross the border like that. They're probably the type with visitor's visas and BMWs who get to truly enjoy Mexico for all it's worth.

Don't let the sunshine spoil your rain...just stand up and COMPLAIN!

-Oscar the Grouch

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is that some kind of training program?

Did you read the article? PS I know your comment was a joke... in bad taste.

Icey's comment was a joke. And funny. Lighten up.

Edited by LuckyStrike

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



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Filed: Country: Guatemala
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$15 or 150 pesos is a lot of money in Mexico. Javier has to work for more than a day just to make that much money. And this is just one attraction at a park-there's probably an entrance fee as well.

Don't let the sunshine spoil your rain...just stand up and COMPLAIN!

-Oscar the Grouch

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Filed: Country: Guatemala
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Yeah Icey there's probably an entrance fee as well duh!

:lol::lol::lol: oh damn you sure told me didn't you? :lol:

Anyway, while the point you were making is very clear, the point I was making is that it's not just $15 in the way we look at $15. $15 for me is less than an hour of work. $15 for them could mean 12 hours of work, or in the case of families like Javier's grandparents, their weekly income. Glad to know that's amusing to you...and I sincerely hope you never have to feel what it's like to be poor, truly poor.

Don't let the sunshine spoil your rain...just stand up and COMPLAIN!

-Oscar the Grouch

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Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Morocco
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Yeah Icey there's probably an entrance fee as well duh!

:lol::lol::lol: oh damn you sure told me didn't you? :lol:

Anyway, while the point you were making is very clear, the point I was making is that it's not just $15 in the way we look at $15. $15 for me is less than an hour of work. $15 for them could mean 12 hours of work, or in the case of families like Javier's grandparents, their weekly income. Glad to know that's amusing to you...and I sincerely hope you never have to feel what it's like to be poor, truly poor.

I think Icey and I both know the money thing as Morocco and Algeria are also poor countries and people barely get paid there... but it's all somewhat relative since the cost of living is much less.

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