50 THE QUEENS COURIER • BUZZ • SEPTEMBER 2, 2021  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  
  
  
 This story is part of a bi-weekly series containing edited chapters of Sharon Hollins’ 2021 book “Crossings: Untold Stories of Undocumented Migrants.”  
 or Sammy from Peru, the  
 trip North across the border  
 to the United States  
 began as a test of bravado. Approached  
 on the football fi eld by  
 a popular friend, he was asked  
 almost as casually as one would  
 inquire what’s for lunch — “Are  
 you up for it?” 
 “Sure,” Sammy replied,  
 with as much macho as he could  
 muster. “When are we going?” 
 The 3,000-mile trip from  
 Peru to America was long and  
 arduous — even for two young  
 men in their early thirties. But,  
 at times — much of them in the  
 beginning of the journey — the  
 feat felt more like a mini-vacation. 
  There was sight-seeing,  
 and some good parties which  
 Sammy remembered fondly. 
 It was 1990s Peru, after all.  
 It was much easier to cross the  
 border back then, Sammy recounted. 
  But neither Sammy  
 nor his friend, Arturo, enjoyed  
 a free ride to the states. 
 His decision came with a  
 price. Sammy said goodbye to  
 his family on May 12, Mother’s  
 Day. His mother — “a strong  
 lady, but still a mother” — shed  
 tears as she bid farewell to her  
 son. Sammy, one of seven children, 
  wasn’t sure if he would  
 ever make it home. 
 “I wondered when I would  
 actually see my family and  
 town again,” Sammy said. “In  
 fact, I never have, and those last  
 glances back are my fi nal memories.” 
 Sammy started in Lima, and  
 the fi rst stop on the journey was  
 Quito in Ecuador. On the way,  
 he saw some of the most spectacular  
 views of the excursion.  
 “Great panoramas and ocean  
 views fl ew by the windows like  
 a National Geographic fi lm— 
 only this was real,” he recalled.  
 When he and Arturo were  
 in Ecuador, they had their  
 fi rst stroke of good luck. Lots  
 of friendly people helped them  
 along the way — and there was  
 one friendly face Sammy would  
 remember forever. 
 “We were traveling on a bus  
 from Costa Rica up to the border  
 of Nicaragua when I met  
 a girl. We were sitting nearby  
 each other on the bus, and we  
 got talking,” Sammy said. 
 That girl asked him to stay,  
 and he debated, but eventually  
 followed through with his  
 promise to himself and Arturo  
 to head to America and see  
 what life would hold for him.  
 Though, he always wondered  
 what could have been with the  
 woman from the bus. 
 But it wasn’t all good views  
 and nice conversation. Sammy  
 and Arturo had to work hard in  
 between destinations to make  
 money to continue on their  
 way to America — some legs  
 of which were far more treacherous  
 than the others. From  
 being confronted by men on  
 horseback carrying machetes  
 to getting taunted on a bus by  
 anti-immigrant locals and getting  
 swindled and robbed of all  
 their cash, there was rarely a  
 dull moment on the second half  
 of Sammy and Arturo’s trip. 
 Their  greatest  challenge  
 was late in their journey: traveling  
 up through Guatemala  
 to the border of Mexico, which  
 Sammy and Arturo knew  
 would be the hardest to cross  
 other than the US border. 
 After running (and jumping)  
 to catch a train to Mexico, the  
 two arrived safely – and somehow, 
  unscathed. “We ended up  
 staying in Mexico and working  
 to get ourselves back together  
 and save money to try again,”  
 Sammy recalled. 
 They got jobs carrying bags  
 for people across the river, and  
 worked day in and day out until  
 coming across a coyote. The  
 pair never wanted to work with  
 a coyote — but they were getting  
 desperate. America was so  
 close, yet so far. 
 They walked, and walked,  
 and walked — so much that  
 Sammy felt he couldn’t go on. 
 “I wasn’t feeling well. We  
 had walked for hours. We soon  
 ran out of water, and I started  
 to feel dehydrated. I felt like I  
 couldn’t get enough oxygen into  
 my lungs,” he said. “My heart  
 was pounding, and my head  
 hurt.” 
 Suddenly, he felt a “divine  
 intervention.” 
 “I saw a spirit cross my  
 path,” Sammy recalled. “I was  
 transfi xed by this ghostly apparition  
 and started to wander off  
 the path after it.” 
 He was staggering and felt  
 near death. He wondered what  
 it would be  like  to go with  the  
 ghost, but realized he wasn’t  
 ready to die — so he prayed to  
 God. 
 “I was near death, and I felt  
 I was saved by divine intervention. 
  As I was praying I was  
 amazed to hear the whole desert  
 praying with me. It was so  
 beautiful. As I cried out to God  
 I heard all the animals nearby  
 join me in prayer,” Sammy said.  
 “I felt we were all crying out to  
 God to listen and save me. The  
 animals, the vegetation, and I  
 were one. I could hear all the  
 different voices of the animals  
 uttering the same prayer. ‘Help  
 him, Lord! Save him Lord,’ they  
 chanted. I could understand  
 their voices as they pulsed  
 through my brain, and I felt I  
 was a part of something.  
 Eventually, the pair made  
 it safely to the states, though,  
 looking back, Sammy was  
 never sure he made the right  
 decision. He often wondered  
 what it would have been like if  
 he worked in America and went  
 back home to Peru. He also always  
 wondered what might  
 have happened if he stayed on  
 that bus with the nice girl from  
 Nicaragua. 
 What he does know is that he  
 wouldn’t recommend the trip. 
 “I don’t and won’t encourage  
 my siblings to cross the border  
 and make the journey here, as I  
 felt the trip is not worth risking  
 your life,” he said. I like my life  
 here, but I work for minimum  
 pay and live simply. I do wonder  
 what might have been if I had  
 returned and made a life for  
 myself back home.” 
 Each chapter of the book tells a different story of an immigrants’ journey to the United States. 
   
 
				
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