Prøve GULL - Gratis
Distant Learning
Mother Jones
|November/December 2021
New immigrant students had the most to gain at Virginia’s Justice High—and the most to lose once the pandemic hit.
On the night Esteban’s mother went to the hospital, five ambulances crowded the street in front of their red-brick walk-up in the DC suburbs. It was late May 2020, and COVID-19 had swept through their densely packed apartment complex, where many of the one- and two-bedroom units housed multiple immigrant families from Central America. More than half of the people in their zip code who were tested that April had the virus—a rate roughly 20 percent higher than in the rest of Virginia—and 17-year-old Esteban, his parents, and the family with whom they shared their apartment were among them. For weeks his mother had a splitting headache, and her throat hurt so much she had trouble swallowing. By that May evening, she had deteriorated to the point where she could barely breathe on her own.
Out on the sidewalk, amid the ambulances’ flashing lights, Esteban held his infant sister, Amalia, while his father climbed into a waiting Uber with his mother. (They hadn’t called 911 because one of Esteban’s uncles had been ferried in an ambulance after he had contracted COVID and incurred a bill he had no way of paying.) As the only English-speaking member of the family, Esteban argued he should go to the hospital. His father disagreed. “You need to take care of the baby,” he said.
It was a terrifying prospect. When his parents brought Amalia home seven months earlier, Esteban had gazed in wonder at her delicate, tiny form and refused to hold her. “He was scared he might hurt her,” his father recalled. Now, with his parents heading to the emergency room, Esteban was in charge of looking after his sister for the very first time. It would be the longest three weeks of his life.
Denne historien er fra November/December 2021-utgaven av Mother Jones.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mother Jones
Mother Jones
Camp Fear
Florida's troubled tent city has inspired copycats across the country.
1 min
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
Minority Report
ICE is arresting more people, in more places, and with more problematic tech than ever before.
3 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
ROAD MAP
Texas Rep. Greg Casar has a plan for a progressive comeback. Step one: Survive the present.
17 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
CULTURE WARS
Did MAGA conspiracy theories doom the lab-grown burger?
3 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
SOFT SECESSION
Redistricting is a start, but California must lead an economic uprising.
8 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
DONALD TRUMP IS CRACKING DOWN ON CLEAN POWER.ERIC TRUMP IS TURNING IT INTO BITCOINS.
Donald Trump rolled down the 18th fairway at his Turnberry golf resort in July, he was troubled by a deathly vision, slowly spinning in the Scottish distance: wind turbines.
11 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
SECRET SERVICE
How unnamed federal workers are defending the work of government, one meme at a time
6 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
DOGE and Taxes The IRS is the biggest employer in the MAGA town of Ogden, Utah.What happens when Elon & Co. start slashing?
If you've ever lived west of the Mississippi, you've probably mailed a tax return to the IRS service center in Ogden, Utah.
21 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
Lobbying for Annexation
How Yossi Dagan is building support for Israeli extremists in Washington
6 mins
November/December 2025
Mother Jones
MIXED MEDIA
Online platforms are transforming the marketplace for Native artists. But will counterfeits pose an existential threat to their work?
8 mins
November/December 2025
Translate
Change font size

