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Immigration: Which Way Home By Rebecca Cammisa

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Immigration: Which Way Home By Rebecca Cammisa
Running head: Immigration

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Immigration

Immigration

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Immigration

Which Way Home by Rebecca Cammisa, is a documentary that follows a group of children, between the ages 9 and 17. The children in the film are from Central America and are attempting to cross the Mexican border into America. The film demonstrates the struggling lives that these children have in their native country, which is why they decided to migrate. On the journey to America, they find out all the other dangers and different struggles they have to face, questioning their decision of migrating. The documentary talks about the increased amounts of children migrating alone to the United States. Under the program, Unaccompanied Child Immigrants, border patrol apprehends
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Children found either around or on the US-Mexican border, are either taken by American or Mexican patrol officers. Those apprehended are then sent to either an American shelter or a Mexican shelter to await deportation.
The documentary focuses on two particular children, Kevin a 14 year old and Fito a 13 year old. Both are migrating from Honduras which is were the majority of unaccompanied children come from. These children have to travel 1, 450 miles, alone, just to get to the GuatemalanMexican border. Once in Mexico, these children have to travel for months, even a year to reach the American-Mexican border.
Watching Kevin and Fito, travel so many miles alone as they shared their family hardship and their reasons for migrating, it displayed an example of Migration Pathways. Under the migration pathways we studied the many reasons why people decide to migrate and under what conditions they do so. Living in poverty, Kevin and Fito both wanted to migrate to obtain better economic and labor opportunities, an example of push and pull factors. Their goal was to reach
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They saw people being raped and others being mugged by Mexican police. They even saw many people die as they rode on “la bestia”, the train that lead to the American-Mexican border.
As I listened to the many emotional hardships these children had at such a young age, another theme that comes to mind is the psychosocial experience of immigrants. These children were going on a journey that has emotionally lasting effects both for them and their families.
Both Kevin and Fito were alone and just like many other migrating children, are leaving their families behind and unsure if they will see their families again. These long and painful separations could lead to stressful and traumatic responses. Usually the children’s response to such emotional experience would dictate how well they would adapt to the new environment. For the boys in the movie, they themselves are unclear of where they belong, to even adapt to a “new environment”. Their home conditions were not that great, Fito was abandon by his mother and
Kevin was pushed away by his step-father that didn’t care for him. At one point in the movie,
Kevin made it to the American border but changed his mind about continuing. He stopped

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