Un breve tramo de valla fronteriza conocido como Friendship Park es un lugar donde las familias pueden tocar la pared con las yemas de los dedos mientras los agentes miran para otro lado.. Este mes, el público puede filtrar Through The Wall, dirigida por Tim Nackashi, en el canal de YouTube de Planet Classroom Network.
The story takes place during the first 18 months of the Trump Administration when anti-immigrant and anti-Mexican attitudes and policies were making headlines. Mother to her 2 year old son Julian, Abril is forced to raise her son alone in the United States. Julian’s father, Uriel, resides in Mexico after being stopped by police for a minor traffic incident and later deported. The family come together each Sunday at the US/Mexican border so they can be physically near to one another even though they are divided.
La Búsqueda Global para la Educación se complace en dar la bienvenida A través de la pared Director Tim Nackashi.
Tim, what inspired you to share this touching story?
I was inspired to share this story after reading a New York Times article about families meeting at the border — for face-to-face conversations, but also for family celebrations. The thought of families having picnics or getting together for Mother’s Day or a birthday at the border wall felt simultaneously heartbreaking but also beautiful.
With Julian’s innocence on the struggles his parents have experienced as immigrants, how different would you say his life has been compared to children with parents who are American residents?
At the time of filming, two-year-old Julian knew his father only through their Sunday visits at the border. So Julian had not been held by his father since he was just a baby. Obviously this is far from what most American families know. It perhaps compares to children with parents who are incarcerated. It is clear that government issues regarding immigration have made it difficult for many to acquire a residency in the U.S.
What systematic changes do you think should be made to help families like Abril’s?
I think one answer is to expand legal work visas. What if people like Abril could legally come here and get some kind of work-permit-residency, and still be able to go back to their country and see their family?
What do you hope audiences take away from this film and this family’s personal story?
My hope is for audiences to see the border crisis in a humanizing light. It’s not just an economic or even a moral concept — real families, real children are involved.
C. M. Rubin and Tim Nackashi
No te pierdas Through The Wall (Curated by Aula SIMA) en la Canal de YouTube de Planet Classroom Network este mes.
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