In a forgotten article posted by The New Yorker writer Peter C. Baker told a story about Tom Kiefer, a Customs and Border Protection Janitor at the C.B.P. processing center in Ajo, Arizona, located less than 50 miles from the Mexico border. Each day Kiefer would discard large bags of the migrant’s belongings seized by Border Control.  When migrants are apprehended, Customs and Border Protection agents dispose of “non essential” and “potentially lethal” items during intake. But before disposal Baker would rummage through the bags to collect packaged foods which he says he donated to a local pantry. And, he also took personal effects such as rosary beads, photographs and pocket Bibles. He took them home, sorted them into piles and photographed them. The images led to a solo show in Los Angeles titled “The American Dream”, which landed him a write up in the pontificating New Yorker magazine.

Yesterday the article brief, link and a photograph resurfaced on twitter. And one twitter user who saw the post and read it responded with a devastating comparison:

https://twitter.com/clarissalule/status/1008584906249666560

The twitter post has since gone viral.

Wedding rings confiscated by Nazis during the Holocaust. (Photo taken in Germany May 5, 1945. Image credit: Corbis)

One response to “Exhibition Image Of Confiscated Rosary Beads From Undocumented Migrants Goes Viral.”

  1. […] Exhibition image of confiscated rosary beads from undocumented migrants goes viral – Read More […]

    Like

Hey! Leave a comment!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Trending