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Story Publication logo April 17, 2017

Surprising Lives of Those Living Along the U.S.-Mexico Border

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A makeshift house that sits right up against the border wall in Otay Canyon in Tijuana. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
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Mexicans call it The Wall of Shame. Few people north of the border ever ask, what does the wall look...

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A pattern quickly establishes itself along most of the border fence that separates Baja California, Mexico from California, USA - Mexican urban centers press up against the U.S. border, as if to draw heat from its economic heat, while California cities seem to push back and away from the border, as seen here in Nido de las Águilas (Eagle's Nest) in the east of an expanding Tijuana metropolis. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
A pattern quickly establishes itself along most of the border fence that separates Baja California, Mexico from California, USA - Mexican urban centers press up against the U.S. border, as if to draw heat from its economic heat, while California cities seem to push back and away from the border, as seen here in Nido de las Águilas (Eagle's Nest) in the east of an expanding Tijuana metropolis. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.

Thirty years ago—three decades before any 21st-century president riled crowds by promising to build a wall—photographer James Whitlow Delano wondered why the U.S.-Mexico border was so fraught. Here were two countries at peace for over a century. But the divide between them was enough to warrant a series of border fences and angry debates about how to stop illegal immigrants.

Thirty years later, the debate, and the region, have intensified. The patches of fence have since been fortified by drones, scanners, and guards. Smugglers who once charged a few hundred dollars to cross the border in the carved-out floor of a truck or in a mad dash across the Sonoran Desert have been replaced by expensive coyotes and deadly cartels, whose only guarantees are high prices, extreme danger, and threats of kidnapping and extortion.

Delano’s latest work focuses on the people who live on the stretch of borderland—known as la frontera on the southern side—and the constant tension, threats, and danger that are part of their daily lives.

 

Families are known to put crosses on the wall bearing the names of loved ones who died attempting to cross the border. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Families are known to put crosses on the wall bearing the names of loved ones who died attempting to cross the border. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Estel, a grandmother, cradles a grandchild in the garden of her home that touches the old border wall. Her son-in-law, Jesus, was deported from the United States because of a felony conviction. He now dreams of getting a visa to Canada. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Estel, a grandmother, cradles a grandchild in the garden of her home that touches the old border wall. Her son-in-law, Jesus, was deported from the United States because of a felony conviction. He now dreams of getting a visa to Canada. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Near Tijuana, a man enters the United States illegally by climbing through razor wire. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Near Tijuana, a man enters the United States illegally by climbing through razor wire. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
A Catholic shrine dedicated to the Virgin of Guadelupe is built right up against the U.S.-built border wall, by 'Luis', a deportee from the U.S. who lives on his hilltop redoubt above Playas de Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. What he and other deportees fear most are 'coyote' traffickers or unknown migrants who prowl this hilltop either seeking to cross into the U.S. or who have more nefarious ambitions. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
A Catholic shrine dedicated to the Virgin of Guadelupe is built right up against the U.S.-built border wall, by "Luis", a deportee from the U.S. who lives on his hilltop redoubt above Playas de Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. What he and other deportees fear most are "coyote" traffickers or unknown migrants who prowl this hilltop either seeking to cross into the U.S. or who have more nefarious ambitions. Image by James whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
A U.S. deportee lives in a makeshift shelter atop a desolate hilltop mesa east of the Pacific Ocean beside U.S.-Mexico border wall. The man, who declined to give his real name, said he occasionally earns five dollars a day collecting shopping carts for a nearby supermarket and lives atop this hill because he feels safe. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
A U.S. deportee lives in a makeshift shelter atop a desolate hilltop mesa east of the Pacific Ocean beside U.S.-Mexico border wall. The man, who declined to give his real name, said he occasionally earns five dollars a day collecting shopping carts for a nearby supermarket and lives atop this hill because he feels safe. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
The makeshift structures along this isolated hilltop in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico belong to one of deportees who has sought refuge here. Deportees occasionally earn money by collecting aluminum cans which they can sell for 220 pesos/kg (11 USD for 2.2 lbs), or collecting shopping carts for a local supermarket for 95 pesos (5 USD) a day. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
The makeshift structures along this isolated hilltop in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico belong to one of deportees who has sought refuge here. Deportees occasionally earn money by collecting aluminum cans which they can sell for 220 pesos/kg (11 USD for 2.2 lbs), or collecting shopping carts for a local supermarket for 95 pesos (5 USD) a day. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Two boys from the Arias family roughhouse in the dust beside their home abutting the original U.S.-built border wall in Colonia Libertad, Tijuana, Mexico. Behind them, a string of lights set up by U.S. Border Patrol stretches to the sea. The lights were set up by U.S. Border Patrol to illuminate the wall to make it more difficult migrants to cross at night. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.
Two boys from the Arias family roughhouse in the dust beside their home abutting the original U.S.-built border wall in Colonia Libertad, Tijuana, Mexico. Behind them, a string of lights set up by U.S. Border Patrol stretches to the sea. The lights were set up by U.S. Border Patrol to illuminate the wall to make it more difficult migrants to cross at night. Image by James Whitlow Delano. Mexico, 2017.

Often, Delano found people who live in a staggering state of limbo—unable to leave their shacks or huts because of their debts to coyotes and cartels. Several men he met had children in the United States who they were unable to see. Many had shame for the state of their lives, economically and personally stalled. One man, from central America, was deported for being a felon in the United States, but rather than return home, he bided his time in northern Mexico while he strategized how he might get to Canada.

A reinforced border wall—a “big” and “beautiful” one, as President Trump has promised—won’t solve problems for these border dwellers. A large infrastructure project would put them in a perpetual construction zone, and their homes the site of increased tension as the wall goes up and is staffed by scores of new guards.

Nor is the wall likely to end illegal smuggling altogether. Delano has seen walls be bypassed with tunnels and ever-more-creative strategies at checkpoints. One action in the arms race of illegal immigration will inevitably beget another.

If, indeed, the stand-off escalates, Delano intends to stay tuned. The humanitarian, economic, and militarized relationship between two countries not at war is too good a story, he says—and only by being there can a person get past the political demagoguing. “I care about our two countries' shared history,” he says. “I guess I’m just curious to see just how far this is going to go.”

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