2007年VOA标准英语-For Senegalese Villagers, Illegal Immigration C(在线收听) |
By Kari Barber
Young men have been leaving in droves, hoping for better-paying jobs in Europe. Most set sail for Spain's Canary Islands, more than a thousand kilometers away, through often turbulent seas. The journey claimed the lives of more than 150 villagers last year, according to a local tally, and most of those who survived were detained and forced to return home. Gnang studied in the United States but returned to the village once he qualified as a teacher. "Everybody wants to go away. And I said to myself, 'OK, after my stay in the U.S., I will go back home.' I told my parents about that and they said, 'No, no, no, no. Please don't come back. Stay there and make money and send us money.' I said, 'No, father, I'm going to come back.'" Talla Gnang says persuading Senegalese to stay in the country is difficult. A three-story house was built with money sent by Mamadou Fall's older brother, who works illegally in Spain. Mamadou Fall tried to reach Spain twice -- once by land and once by sea -- but authorities in Morocco detained him both times. Now he helps deported migrants like himself. Fall says he would stay in Thiaroye if there were any jobs, but he has given up trying to sneak into Europe. Instead he is trying his luck with the U.S. "green card" lottery, hoping to win permission to live and work in America. So many young men from Thiaroye have been lost at sea that their mothers have formed a support group. The women are making a local grain meal to sell. With their primary financial providers gone, their lives have become more difficult. Arame Leye says she believes her son is dead. With her son's income gone, Leye sells pancakes to make a living, and to feed the baby girl her son left behind. She says she prays none of her seven other children will tempt the sea by setting sail in a search for a different life. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/1/36746.html |