Caring for Fatherless & Orphaned
Tagged with: adoption • David Platt • deportation • Detention • evangelicalism • families • Focus on the Family • foster care • immigration • Jim Daly • Matthew Soerens • orphans • Rick Morton • Russell Moore • Tony Merida
We know of a couple of kids that live with cousins, aunts or uncles whose parents have been deported. How many are here like that? Double, triple the 5,100?
Why do the children not return to their countries with their parents?!? My husband is the pastor of a Hispanic congregation and we know that if this happened to any of our families with young children, they would take their kids with them or have their kids sent to them!
Good question, Chandra. I expect (at least based on my anecdotal experience) that most deported parents do take their children with them back to their countries of origin (the parents’ countries of origin, which may or may not be the child’s country of origin, as many were born in the US).
There are a few circumstances where kids would need to be placed into foster care, though, which probably account for these 5,100 kids found in this study:
1) A lot of these kids are in foster care when their parent are detained (in jail, basically), not deported. Sometimes ICE allows people out on bond, but sometimes they do not, or the person may not be able to afford a bond (which is often $5,000 in my experience). So while the parent(s) wait for a court date–which could take more than a year, most likely–they are detained and there is no one to take care of the kids.
2) It’s also true that in certain circumstances, the kids–who were born in the US and are US citizens–may not be citizens of any other country and may not be eligible for a visa from any other country. Mexico has acquisition of citizenship laws similar to those in the US, so that if I child is born abroad to a Mexican citizen, the child probably acquires Mexican citizenship through his or her parent (in addition to being a US citizen under the 14th amendment). But not every country has those sort of laws (known as “jus sanguinis” citizenship laws, meaning that nationality is inherited by blood), so there could be situations when a parent is deported but the child, who was born in the US and is a citizen only of the US, is not granted permission by any other country to go elsewhere.
You’re certainly right, though, that most of the cases of deportation don’t lead kids to foster care; most often, the kids either go with their parents or go into the legal custody of a relative or friend–which is why the number of kids affected by deportation policies is far more than 5,100.