ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 4月19日 08時08分
During the 2 decades René Álvarez spent in the United States, he built a construction business, bought a house and raised 4 daughters in Georgia. But since he was detained and deported — accused of drunken driving — he has lost it all. “They destroyed me,” René said. He returned to Mexico last year with his wife and their 3 youngest daughters, who were both born in the U.S., and started from scratch. René did have some assistance, though. The Mexico City government gave him a loan of about $2,600, with which he bought a truck, a workshop and new tools. This assistance is a change in pace. For years, the Obama administration sent back thousands of Mexicans each week — more than 2 million altogether — and Mexico’s establishment barely reacted. But now, Mexican politicians are eagerly embracing them, portraying deportees as the embodiment of President Trump’s hostility toward their country and their people. @brett_gundlock photographed a boy running through the Álvarez family’s new neighborhood on the southern outskirts of Mexico City.
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