Ana Paredes paced back and forth in anxious anticipation at baggage claim, eyes fixed on the escalator. When the little girl emerged, she rushed forward to clutch and caress her — Melissa, the daughter she had not seen for seven years. nyti.ms/3tE6JBK
Melissa’s arrival in Los Angeles marked the end of a 2,500-mile journey that began in Guatemala in February, progressed over land through Mexico and then ended in a hazardous raft trip across the Rio Grande into Texas. nyti.ms/3bhgorg
Over the past six months, nearly 50,000 migrant children like Melissa have crossed the southwestern border on their own, an extraordinary new wave of immigration that has left authorities scrambling to open shelters and locate family members in the U.S. nyti.ms/3bhgorg
Unlike the migrant children separated from their families at the border under the Trump administration, many of the children arriving now were left behind years ago in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador by parents who traveled north to find work. nyti.ms/3bhgorg
The arrivals are creating joyous reunions across the country but also posing challenges for parents like Ana, who paid thousands of dollars to smugglers to ferry her child to the U.S. and now must help her daughter ease into a new, unfamiliar life. nyti.ms/3bhgorg
Read more about Melissa and the surge of migrant children at the U.S. Mexico border: nyti.ms/3bhgorg
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The Chinese government, tightening its grip on Muslim ethnic minorities, is forcing women in Xinjiang to have fewer babies — just as most other women across China are being urged to have more.
“The government wants to replace our people,” one woman said. nyti.ms/3uCtaZl
Interviews with more than a dozen Uyghurs, Kazakhs and other Muslims from Xinjiang, as well as a review of official statistics, government notices and reports in the state-run news media, depict an effort to control the community’s reproductive rights. nyti.ms/3uCtaZl
Women were pressured by the authorities to be fitted with contraceptive devices or be sterilized. As they recovered at home, Chinese government officials were sent to live with them. One woman described a minder groping her. nyti.ms/3uCtaZl
“Especially this year, it seems like all mothers do is talk about our perceived failures: how we’re failing at remote schooling, or making the wrong choices,” @JessGrose writes. This Mother’s Day, we’re sharing our strengths. nyti.ms/3o2Yaik
Kate Baer shares her secret strength: feigning interest in her daughter's Minecraft obsession. nyti.ms/3b9nf6f
Veronica Chambers on her determination to raise her child to be fluent in Spanish, though she was not. nyti.ms/3tDPAIo
Since Ma’Khia Bryant, 16, was fatally shot by a police officer in Columbus, Ohio while holding a knife, her siblings have spoken out about her life in the foster care system, which ignored efforts by their grandmother to reunite the family. nyti.ms/3f7MQ0z
Ohio places children in foster care at a rate 10% percent higher than the national average. The share of Black children removed from homes is more than double their share of the population. nyti.ms/3bdrZI2
A review of Ma’Khia’s time in foster care shows it failed her in critical ways. Research shows that children fare better when remaining with family. Each successive placement causes more trauma, further setting back a child in crisis. Ma’Khia had five. nyti.ms/3bdrZI2
Silicon Valley has remained one of the most unequal regions in the U.S. -- and for many midlevel engineers, food truck workers and longtime residents, it has become increasingly inhospitable. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Between them, Ravi and Gouthami have multiple degrees. Although the couple has worked hard and they make good money — their starting salaries were about $90,000 each — they feel that a future in Silicon Valley eludes them. nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Diane and her late husband moved to the Bay Area over 30 years ago. Since then, she has watched the area change: “It’s overcrowded now. It used to be lovely, you know — you had space, you had no traffic. Here it was absolutely a gorgeous place." nyti.ms/33ugQ1f
Students and faculty at the University of Texas at Austin want the alma mater, “The Eyes of Texas,” performed by white students in blackface at minstrel shows until the mid-1960s, to go. Wealthy alumni have threatened to cut off donations if that happens. nytimes.com/2021/05/07/us/…
The anthem, sung by tens of thousands of fans at Texas football games, was in part inspired by the words of Robert E. Lee, the Confederate general. Last June, student-athletes called for the song to be replaced by one “without racists undertones.” nytimes.com/2020/06/13/us/…
The university agreed to other changes — rename a building, erect a statue of the school’s first Black football player — but refused to change the song. nytimes.com/2020/07/14/us/…
U.S. job growth slowed significantly in April, confounding rosy forecasts for the recovery and sharpening debates over how best to revive a labor market that was severely weakened by the pandemic. nyti.ms/3b9oOkB
The U.S. added 266,000 jobs last month, the government reported Friday, a third of the gains than in March. The jobless rate rose slightly to 6.1%, as more people rejoined the labor force. nyti.ms/3b9oOkB
As the economy fitfully recovers, there are divergent accounts of what’s going on in the labor market. nyti.ms/3b9oOkB