ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月17日 00時50分


No sitting on the floor, no hugging your siblings, and it's best not to cry. We spoke to migrant children about life in detention centers. There are more than 100 of these facilities — a rough blend of boarding school, day care center and medium security lockup — around the U.S. Last week, in trying to comply with a court order, the government returned slightly more than half of 103 children under the age of 5 to their migrant parents. But more than 2,800 children remain in these facilities, where the environments range from impersonally austere to nearly bucolic. Depending on several variables, including happenstance, a child might be sent to a 33-acre youth shelter in Yonkers that features picnic tables, sports fields and even an outdoor pool. Or that child could wind up at a converted motel along a tired Tucson strip of discount stores, gas stations and budget motels. Still, some elements of these detention centers seem universally shared. The multiple rules. The wake-up calls and the lights-out calls. The several hours of schooling every day. Most of all, these facilities are united by a collective sense of aching uncertainty — scores of children gathered under a roof who have no idea when they will see their parents again. Last week, @victorblue took this photo of Adan Galicia Lopez, 3, after he was reuinted with his mother in Phoenix. They had been separated for 4 months.


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