14 THE QUEENS COURIER • JULY 15, 2021 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  
  
  
 hen Elsy was  growing  
 up  penniless in Honduras, 
  she felt blessed  
 to  live near a river due to her  
 home’s lack of running  water  
 and plumbing. Yet, the rising  
 tides would often flood the  
 bamboo-and-brick structure  
 — eventually forcing her  parents  
 to move  further into  the  
 nearby village, where Elsy 
 lived with her eight siblings. 
 Her father eventually 
 walked out on them when she  
 was six, and, in her words, “life  
 became even harder.”  
 “After sixth grade I stopped  
 attending school,” she said. “I  
 left  school  to  help my mother  
 look after the younger children  
 while she went to work. As a  
 teenager I started to worry  
 about  our  situation  and  wonder  
 what would  happen with 
 my life.” 
 Elsy’s  life  is  captured  in  
 detail  in  Sharon  Hollins’ 
 new book “Crossings: Untold  
 Stories  of  Undocumented  
 Migrants,”  which  spends  
 12  chapters  recounting  the  
 lives  of  a dozen  immigrants 
 and  their  extraordinary  
 journies to America. 
 For Elsy, her family’s first 
 foray  to  the  land  of  opportunity  
 came  when  she  was 
 14,  and  her  mother made  the  
 treacherous  trip  to  America,  
 believing it was the best way 
 to improve her childrens’ economic  
 prospects. 
 Without  her mom to  look 
 after  her, Elsy eventually reconnected  
 with her estranged  
 father, and began  living with 
 him,  her stepmom, and  her  
 three half-siblings in a different  
 area of Honduras.  
 The  reunion wouldn’t  last 
 long, however. Just before her 
 15th birthday, three gun-welding  
 men opened fire on the 
 family,  killing  her  dad, and 
 shooting Elsy in the chest.  
 “The  bullets  started whizzing  
 past my head and  going  
 through  the wood of my dad’s 
 house behind me,” she said. 
 “I  could  hear  dishes  breaking  
 inside the house as bullets 
 sprayed the kitchen.” 
 “I was lucky,” she said. “The 
 bullet had gone in through my 
 back  and out the other side. 
 You can still see the mark from 
 the bullet hole.” 
 Elsy eventually took  up 
 with a boyfriend, who she left 
 after he “forced himself” upon  
 her. But, she later found out,  
 her life would changed forever. 
 “My world initially  came  
 crashing down when I figured 
 out that I was pregnant,” she  
 said. “The pregnancy was from  
 the rape, and I had few options  
 and didn’t know what to do.” 
 Eventually, Elsy  gave 
 birth to a baby  girl named  
 Astrid. Her love  for her newborn  
 was overwhelming, and  
 the thought of separating herself  
 from Astrid was devastating, 
  but Elsy knew that going  
 to the United  States  was  her  
 best option to keep Astrid out  
 of extreme  poverty  that  was  
 rampant in Honduras.  
 So Elsy found a female coyote  
 (the name for a person who  
 smuggles people illegally), who  
 took her by car to Guatemala,  
 and then Mexico, where she  
 waited on overcrowded dirty  
 floors  for about a week, while  
 waiting for more potential border 
 crossers to join them.  
 Eventually, the group totaled  
 18 people, and  they 
 boarded a bus for the next rung  
 of their journey. 
 “If you think  that sounds 
 okay—it wasn’t,” Eksy recalls.  
 “The  journey was excruciating. 
  Eighteen hours sitting on  
 the floor in a small space with  
 no stops to get out and go to the  
 bathroom,” she said.”  
 When their “suffocating” 
 journey finally took them to the  
 U.S.-Mexico border, the  group  
 gathered secretly after dark in  
 a  three-bedroom house, which  
 was usually filled with around 
 50 people. 
 “The coyotes drink and use 
 drugs,”  Elsy said. “Sometimes  
 the men take some of the girls  
 from the  groups and force the  
 girls to have sex with them.”  
 Avoiding that fate, Elsy patiently  
 waited until it was finally  
 their time to go, when she  
 received her instructions:  
 “We are going to drive you  
 for  about  an  hour  to  a  place  
 near the border,” a coyote told  
 her. “Once we  get  you to this 
 place, then this is what you are  
 going to do — get out and run!” 
 About 40 people  braved 
 barbed-wire fencing for hours  
 by foot, before reaching awaiting  
 cars, and drove all the way 
 to Los Angeles. 
 “We  had  made  it!”  Elsy  
 said. 
 Her care-taking coyote  
 helped her pick out some new 
 clothes,  before  flying  Elsy to 
 New York  in April to  be with 
 her mother. (Long before 9/11, 
 airport security wasn’t as 
 strict as  it  is today  for domestic  
 flights).  
 She reconnected with her  
 mom, who had been working as 
 a nanny for a family in Brooklyn, 
  who drove Elsy’s mom to 
 pick her up at the airport. 
 “My mom came armed with  
 hugs, kisses and a nice sweater 
 for me.” 
 The next day, Elsy began  
 work  helping the sister of  her 
 mother’s  employer,  looking  after  
 five kids. By 1997, Elsy had 
 managed to get a salary  increase  
 to $420 a week, which she 
 sent home to her daughter and 
 other family members — except  
 for spending a small amount on 
 English classes, which helped  
 her become fluent. 
 When her employer moved 
 to a new state, Elsy began working  
 for a different family in East 
 Northport on Long Island.  
 “It so happened that they 
 had a  friend called Willy who  
 had  just been divorced. The 
 family was helping him by letting  
 him stay  in their  home,  
 and that is how I met my future 
 husband,” she said. 
 Willy and Elsy eventually 
 had two children, and they  
 were able to file the proper paperwork  
 to allow Astrid to join  
 them in America. When Willy 
 got a good  job at a  local  business, 
  the family was able to buy 
 their own home in 2006. Astrid  
 would go up to join the Navy, before  
 heading off to college. 
 Now, the immigrant enjoys  
 her stable life in America, and  
 has expressed her eternal gratitude  
 to the country she worked 
 so hard to live in. 
 “I love this country and everything  
 it has given me,” Elsy 
 says. “I think for me, I achieved 
 the American dream.” 
 This story is part of a bi-weekly series containing edited  
 chapters of Sharon Hollins’ 2021 book “Crossings: Untold  
 Stories  of Undocumented Migrants.” Each  chapter  of the  
 book tells a different story of an immigrants’ journey to the 
 United States. 
 
				
/WWW.QNS.COM