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The Undocumented Migration Project: University Of Michigan Researcher Documents Belongings Left Behind While Crossing The Border (VIDEO)

The Huffington Post   Cindy Y. Rodriguez First Posted: 01/19/2012 6:04 pm Updated: 01/24/2012 11:30 pm

Not many people consider the human side of immigration, let alone take the time to document the belongings of those left behind by the migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.

Worn sneakers, dirty backpacks and empty water bottles fill the Sonoran desert. Each object tells a story of struggle, hope and determination and it wasn't until recently that they were collected for anthropologists hoping to study the science behind migration phenomenon.

"This is not garbage" said Jason De Leon, Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Michigan, "The goal of the project is to rigorously and systematically collect data on the social phenomenon of border crossing using the lens of anthropology to provide insight into the realities of this process."

Since 2008, The Undocumented Migration Project, directed by De Leon, has collected what has become the largest assemblage of migrant artifacts in the country.

In addition to clothing and water bottles, personal possessions such as letters, photos and prayer cards have also been collected. The artifacts are organized in boxes and meticulously numbered, just as a typical museum collection would do. De Leon had his heart set on studying archaeology but then decided to change sub-disciplines and pursue his ethnographic interests in Latino migration.

"I could no longer continue to sit in excavation units in Mexico and listen passively as people told me about the suffering and violence that they had endured in the U.S. in order to make a decent living wage," explains De Leon to HuffPost.

Even though there is a some evidence that the numbers of migrants attempting to cross the border from Mexico has decreased, there are still approximately one-half million immigrants attempting to cross the border in southern Arizona each year. Of those, 90 percent are Mexican, while 10 percent come from Central and South American countries. An estimated 200 people die each year from causes incurred during border crossing, including hyperthermia, according to De Leon.

There are emotional and physical challenges in documenting the sites that people consider "garbarge."

"Trying to document violence and suffering in Southern Arizona and in Northern Mexico can be emotionally taxing," De Leon said to HuffPost. He is constantly racing against the clock to find sites and collect information before they are cleaned up and gone forever. Working in the middle of the summer during times when temperatures can reach 115 degrees can also be physically exhausting.

Interestingly enough, while documenting, De Leon has encountered migrants in the desert but works hard to avoid them out of fear of putting them into danger. He doesn't seek them out and works during the hottest part of the day when people are hiding in the desert shadows to avoid the heat.

"Typically, when you run into someone in the desert they need help. In the majority of cases where I have encountered someone they have asked me to call 911 because they were injured, suffering from extreme dehydration, and/or on the verge of death," he told The Huffington Post.

De Leon says that some humanitarian groups and artists have incorporated migrant artifacts in art projects to raise awareness of this issue. Still, people that save or collect migrant items have tended to preferentially select particular items (e.g., shoes, photos, personal possessions) over objects that appear more "mundane" (e.g., water bottles, food wrappers). He considers all of these artifacts to be of "equal importance."

However, not everyone is on board with the project, comments such as: "Tell them to keep their illegals and make sure they pick up after themselves," and, "The only thing this trash is an indicator is that these people have no love or respect for this country. They enter illegally and dump trash where ever they go" have been some of feedback the project has received.

"One only needs to read online comments about my work to get a sense of the hatred and racism that this type of research elicits from some people," De Leon explained.

The project has received opposition from people who either want to simplistically characterize migrant artifacts as "trash" or those who are blatantly anti-immigrant. Even so, the project has has received funding from the National Science Foundation and is backed 100% by The University of Michigan.

While De Leon has been contacted by the Smithsonian as a possible venue for the first exhibit of artifacts, he hopes the premiere exhibit will be in the Museo Nacional de Antropología in Mexico City with parts of the collection eventually repatriated to Mexico.

"These objects are an important historical record of the shared migration story of Americans and Latinos, but I think it is important that these artifacts are returned to the communities of people who have been so directly impacted by out-migration," De Leon said to HuffPost, "These artifacts belong to the migrants that have faced the harsh Sonoran desert."

Loading Slideshow...
  • Migrant Belongings Left Behind Crossing Into America

    A child's backpack recovered in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona. Photo taken near Arivaca road, AZ. Credit: Michael Wells, mwellsphoto.com

  • Migrant Belongings Left Behind Crossing Into America

    A tree carving from a migrant station in the Sonoran Desert. "America" could refer to the Mexican soccer team or the country whose undocumented labor markets routinely employ those who can make it through the deadly desert. Credit: Michael Wells, mwellsphoto.com

  • Migrant Belongings Left Behind Crossing Into America

    A water drop maintained by the Tucson group Samaritan Patrol. This group often leaves water along migrant trails in southern Arizona for those who inevitably run out. Credit: Michael Wells, mwellsphoto.com

  • Migrant Belongings Left Behind Crossing Into America

    A large "migrant station" near the town of Arivaca, AZ. Migrant stations are places where people rest, eat, change clothes, and leave items behind while crossing into the U.S. Over time, these sites can become large archaeological repositories of items used by migrants. Credit: Michael Wells, mwellsphoto.com

  • Migrant Belongings Left Behind Crossing Into America

    Migrant shrine in southern Arizona near Arivaca Lake. Migrants will often leave offerings at ad hoc shrines along their dangerous journeys. Credit: Michael Wells, mwellsphoto.com

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Not many people consider the human side of immigration, let alone take the time to document the belongings of those left behind by the migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. Worn sneakers, dirt...
Not many people consider the human side of immigration, let alone take the time to document the belongings of those left behind by the migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. Worn sneakers, dirt...
 
 
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10:42 PM on 11/25/2012
From reading The Posting there are many "UGLY AMERICANS" posting a Comment.YOU SEE AMERICA IS "HATE NATION"in the eyes of The WORLD.PLEASE DON"T POST HATE! KEEP IT AT YOUR HOME.
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10:38 PM on 11/25/2012
Many have left their "life" as many have been torture to death by U.S Military Police aka ICE on U.S Mexican border.The Latino Native Human has lost it's "humanity" in the eyes of modern day America 2012. Anti-Latino hate has sadly become a "normal"for white and Black America post Civil Rights and post 9/11.
09:39 AM on 03/13/2012
Hopefully these garbage collectors are being paid for by private money and not tax money.

The anthropologists will be coming by my neighborhood on Friday morning again with their truck that beeps when it backs up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James Haun
the first 374 fans are always the hardest
12:03 PM on 01/27/2012
litterbugs
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TarzanaGirl
11:17 AM on 01/27/2012
Perhaps the American border/customs office can be set up in the middle of the desert?

In all seriousness, it's tragic that ANYONE has to die this way, and especially when adults subject their helpless children to these circumstances. Solution: Come LEGALLY like millions of others, myself included, did. - Legal Immigrants are always welcome. Deserts remain clean. People are not resentful of those who break the law. Problem Solved!
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Lisa29
Thank GOD there IS a GOD 100% APBT lover
12:13 PM on 01/27/2012
I totally agree!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alcornc
09:30 AM on 01/27/2012
"One only needs to read online comments about my work to get a sense of the hatred and racism that this type of research elicits from some people," De Leon explained.

So, now us Gringos are racist because we have a problem with foreigners leaving mountains of trash in our country as they sneak in. The racism card is really getting old.
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Lisa29
Thank GOD there IS a GOD 100% APBT lover
12:14 PM on 01/27/2012
I think it's played so often not that no one is getting that "shock" repsonse anymore. You can only be surprised so many times.
09:41 AM on 03/13/2012
Are non white, legal immigrants, against illegal immigration also considered Gringos?
09:16 AM on 01/27/2012
I feel absolutely awful about the hardships faced by criminals sneaking into my country. It's tragic that they have to suffer so much before draining our public services, overcrowding our schools, and turning nice neighborhoods into slums. The best way to solve these tragic conditions comes straight out of the Vlad the Impaler playbook.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elizabeth Everett
People's Democracy Not Bankers' Oligarchy
09:04 AM on 01/27/2012
For those of you who don’t like immigration from Mexico now is your chance. If the people coming here are coming to sell drugs and commit crimes there will be evidence of those intentions. DeLeon has shown as children’s shoes and backpacks as well as water bottles. The evidence looks pretty innocent. If there are burglar tools, needles, drug paraphernalia, bullet casings, that tells a very different tale. Personally, I live too far away from Arizona and other places where people are complaining about illegal immigration to see what is really going on, and I know that I can’t trust the media or the Universities to tell me the truth. So let the people who want a border fence make their case by showing us some artifacts if they can.
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Lisa29
Thank GOD there IS a GOD 100% APBT lover
12:12 PM on 01/27/2012
Do you really believe that they're going to leave artifacts as you call them like that behind? that's the whole point of coming here. Not that I believe that all of them are going to sell drugs or rob someone because that would be narrow minded to believe that but there seems to be quite a few that are milking the system for whatever they can get. We can't take care of the people that have lived here all their lives that have worked and paid into the system that's suppose to help take care of them and isn't able to because we're running out of money. Where I live is not as bad as some. But I can say that there are plenty of them. OF course they're using foodstamp debit cards and WIC vouchers. They can't speak english or act like they can't understand it but they can sure speak it enough to get on the free programs.
10:27 PM on 01/29/2012
You really think the people bringing drugs are illegal? The people bringing drugs are citizens of the united states! They go over there and run the drugs back here. Programs to help the poor are for all citizens even those who don't speak english. We as citizens of the United States can speak any language we want. It is a free country! Also until there is a national language people can speak what they want whenever they want. They also have to be provided information in any language they speak. You want money for schools have kids who are migrant children or children learning english as a second language. There are private programs that help schools like that. Once again PRIVATE programs not government programs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
orcinous
Close Guantanamo, pass a jobs bill, end the drones
11:23 AM on 01/25/2012
I had to laugh when the author said they were going to repatriate the trash back to Mexico.Let's send it all back along with a bill for the cleanup cost. Wish we could repatriate all the people that crossed the borders.
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seegray
Nobody can bring you peace but yourself (Emerson)
05:03 PM on 01/24/2012
Wow. So I actually commented on the story itself as an interesting study (as a fellow anthropologist), and my comment didn't even go to pendingland.....it apparently just was ignored. Not offensive enough? So sorry......
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special38x2
Live, Love, & Laugh
07:03 PM on 01/25/2012
LOL, it must have gone against the writer's version of events, you know there can only be one reality... :)
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seegray
Nobody can bring you peace but yourself (Emerson)
04:47 PM on 01/24/2012
"One man's trash is another's treasure."
As an anthropologist, I've been wondering when someone would be doing a study like this. It would be particularly useful if one were to know what objects made the full journey, and what were considered "impractical", or "not important enough" to warrant the energies needed for the full journey.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chevyliddle
what's a micro-bayou?
08:57 PM on 01/25/2012
How would you determine what's useful or what's important when you don't know the reason for leaving it behind? It could be a matter of "not needing it", too tired to carry it any further or just not enough room on the vehicle used for transportation. I can tell you why the dirty diapers were left behind and the empty water bottles but everything else is just conjecture and therefore useless in a study.
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megandvc
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right.
10:36 PM on 01/25/2012
Chevy, have you ever been to L.A. or the surrounding area? They don't care. They thrw garbage on the floor. They don't even put their toilet paper in the toilet. And they do this in the country they are dying to come to? gross
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Debra Moore
Play nicely or go away....
02:14 PM on 01/24/2012
Expending resources—time, energy, money—to study glorified LITTER is absurd. Take those resources and pour them into education programs for underprivileged students of all races—there's a real need and a real benefit to society as a whole.
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Misanthropical
I am unPC and I don't care!
04:43 PM on 01/25/2012
Thank you! F&F
InLosAngeles
Speaking Truth to Groupthink
11:47 AM on 01/24/2012
Shouldn't this be a feel good puff story in the Huffpost Crime section?

You have to feel for the poor law abiding Latinos of all nationalities who follow the law and are trying to raise their children to be law abiding, productive citizens and yet are always lumped together with every Latino by those in liberal world who can see no distinction when looking at them.
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Misanthropical
I am unPC and I don't care!
04:43 PM on 01/25/2012
Good point! F&F
10:32 PM on 01/29/2012
It's lumped together by pathetic racists who claim they aren't.
11:18 PM on 01/22/2012
I won't even read the comments below because they are probably hateful, mean-spirited things that in no way capture the sentiment of the general public. All I can say is R.I.P to all the beautiful people who came here looking for a better life but lost their life trying to come here. My prayer is that Mexico and Latin America will flourish with peace and prosperity in the coming years and in the meantime we in America can start to welcome you with open arms and let you stop living in the shadows. Que dios les bendiga.
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special38x2
Live, Love, & Laugh
07:09 PM on 01/25/2012
LOL, you should read them, because they are representative of what people think out there. I'm sure a lot of people are throwing in the BS flag for the money getting blown on this sort of project, especially since it has no critical impact on the population at large. I'm surprised they aren't taking fecal samples along the way to figure out what they ate more of as the trip progressed closer to the states...I guess we could sit here all day asking gee what about this and that, but most of us feel there are far more pressing issues going on now that warrant study and financial footing. Sorry, but read and listen a little, we're listening to you.
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megandvc
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right.
07:16 PM on 01/25/2012
Let them come here legally and I will throw a party for them. Sneak across the border in the middle of the night, and you deserve everything you get. Tell me how fair it is for the Hispanics who did everything legally and spent the time and money doing it the right way? OPEN ARMS? Its not called the dream act for nothing.
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