Guatemalan boy left for better life, died alone

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SAN JOSE LAS FLORES, Guatemala (AP) — Gilberto Ramos
wanted to leave his chilly mountain village for the United States to
earn money to treat his mother’s epilepsy.
His mother begged him
not to go. "The better treatment would have been if he stayed," Cipriana
Juarez Diaz said in a tearful interview with The Associated Press on
Tuesday. When he wouldn’t relent, she draped him with a white rosary for
safe passage.
A month later, his decaying body was found in the
Texas desert. Now, the boy has become a symbol for the perils faced by a
record flood of unaccompanied children from Central America who are
crossing illegally into the U.S.
Authorities said Monday that
Gilberto was 11, which would have made him one of the youngest known
children to die crossing the desert. But his parents said Tuesday that
Gilberto was 15.
The parents explained that they had taken several
years to register his birth because of the remoteness of their village
in Guatemala’s northern mountains. When they did, they had forgotten
Gilberto’s actual birth date, so they listed the same date as his
younger brother.
The boy was shirtless, having likely suffered heat stroke, but still wearing the rosary.
"He was a good son," Juarez said. "May God give me the strength to endure."
Teenage
boys seeking work have long been part of the stream of young men
heading north from Central America to escape poverty and gang violence.
But the number of unaccompanied immigrant children picked up along the U.S. border has been rising for
three years.
Migrants
tell of hearing that children traveling alone and parents traveling
with young kids would be released by U.S. authorities and allowed to
continue to their destination. Gilberto, too, had heard in Guatemala
that if he got in, he would be allowed to stay, his family said.
He
was born and grew up in San Jose Las Flores in a modest wood and
sheet-metal home in the Cuchumatanes mountains of Huehuetenango province
along the Mexico border. At 6,600 feet above sea level, the exuberant
beauty of deep-green hills and canyons, shrouded with clouds and floral
bursts of purple and yellow, is a stark contrast to the extreme poverty.
There
is no running or potable water and only a latrine in the family home.
In the kitchen, there is food, tortillas or wheat atole, an oatmeal-like
drink, but never enough.
The cluster of homes where Gilberto
lived is accessible only by foot, a difficult walk of nearly a mile
(about 1 ½ kilometers) along a rocky and often muddy mile-long path
through the canyons. Gilberto took that path each way to school, where
he went as far as third grade before dropping out.
"He had to work to help the family," said his teacher, Francisco Hernandez, who remembered that
Gilberto loved to draw.
More
than half of 50 schoolchildren attending now raised their hands Tuesday
when asked if they had family in the U.S., shouting, "I have eight,"
”seven," ”three!"
While many migrating minors say they are fleeing
violence, the biggest threat in San Jose Las Flores is poverty. There
are both mining jobs and drug traffickers in the border state, but
neither touch the remote village where Gilberto grew up.
"Here
most of the people are farmers. They grow beans, rice, potatoes," said
Raul Cifuentes, president of the town’s development committee. "But they
don’t have a way to import or export, so they stay poor."
Gilberto
and his father, Francisco Ramos, hired themselves out to harvest and
clean corn. Things improved when the oldest son, Esbin Ramos, reached
Chicago and started working in a restaurant. He sends $100 to $120 a
month when he can afford it, allowing the family to build a two-room
home out of cement block to replace their wooden shack and paint it
bright red and green. Gilberto slept on a piece of foam on the floor.
Short,
quiet and humble, he stayed close to home. But he grew despairing and
bored, Esbin Ramos said. Meanwhile, their mother got sicker. The older
brother suggested Gilberto come to Chicago, where he could return to
school and work at night and on weekends.
Gilberto set out May 17
with a change of clothes and a backpack along the same path as his
brother, walking the rugged road to the center of town and then hitching
a ride to Chiantla to meet up with the smuggler, known as a coyote.
He
left his cowboy boots behind because he didn’t want them to get ruined,
his father said.
The trip cost $5,400, and the family had
borrowed $2,600 of that, paying $2,000 the first week of the journey and
another $600 the week before he died. They still owe the debt.
Esbin
Ramos said Tuesday that he didn’t know much about how Gilberto reached
the Mexican border city of Reynosa. Esbin went the whole way in the back
of a semitrailer. He said Gilberto told him he arrived by bus.
"I’m OK, just the deposit money," Gilberto told his father as he was about to cross into Texas.

Then
Gilberto and the coyote disappeared. His parents tried to call the
coyote. Four days passed, then five, then six. By the eighth day, Esbin
Ramos was worried. He called the Guatemalan consulate in Houston and
officials in Guatemala seeking help, he said.
Then he got a call
from a woman McAllen, Texas, from what agency he doesn’t know, telling
him his brother was dead. They had found the body June 15, authorities
said, and Esbin’s phone number on the inside of Gilberto’s belt buckle, a
tactic many migrants use to hide information from drug traffickers who
are looking to extort money from their families.
The Guatemalan
consulate in the United States notified the family on Tuesday that
Gilberto’s body would be returned soon, whenever there is an available
flight. His father is already preparing his grave site in the local
cemetery.
His bedridden mother stumbled to her feet Tuesday to
pray at the altar adorned with wildflowers, arranged where he slept.
There are no photos placed there because the family sent most of them to
the U.S. to identify the body.
"The coyote told me that he was
going to take him to a safe place and I believed him," Francisco Ramos
said. "But that was the fate of my son."
___
Associated Press writer Katherine Corcoran in Mexico City contributed to this report.

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