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Mission in a drum:
The Rev. Robin
Hoover founded Humane Borders in 2000 to help save
the lives of people entering the US illegally across
the hot Arizona desert.
ROBERT HARBISON/ SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MONITOR
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The canteen man of the US-Mexico
border
The Rev. Robin Hoover has
set up watering stations to prevent migrant deaths. Is
that saintly or seditious?
By
Gail Russell Chaddock
| Staff writer of The Christian
Science Monitor
THREE POINTS, ARIZ.
The Rev. Robin Hoover bounces through the Arizona
desert in a white truck that he has turned into his own
mobile water-pumping station a sort of canteen on
wheels. The man of the cloth on this day in Levi's 501
jeans, a khaki vest, and cap maneuvers the vehicle
through a tangle of mesquite, chollas, and prickly pear
cactuses toward a blue flag in the distance.
The pennant marks two 58-gallon water drums. They
serve as an emergency drinking station for migrants
making their trek northward from Mexico in what locals
simply call "the migration" the intensity of which is
evident in the multitude of sneaker and boot prints in
the sand.
After refilling the barrels, Mr. Hoover and a
volunteer raise a new 30-foot pole and replace the
tattered flag: The station is ready for more use. "Blue
is the most unusual color in our desert and it's a
symbol for water," says the clergyman.
Hoover is on a singular mission to save lives in the
Arizona desert at a time of one of the fiercest debates
over illegal immigration in modern history. That makes
the tart-talking minister both reviled and revered.
To detractors, his effort to set up water stations
represents a direct form of aid and encouragement to
those crossing the border illegally, which may include
terrorists. He has received numerous death threats as a
result.
But supporters see him as a humanitarian who puts
compassion over politics in his helping of those who
often get overlooked in the antiseptic debate over
immigration policy. Hoover sees himself as holding
often assertively the "passionate center" on an issue
with no lack of voices on the extremes.
"We don't like the migration. We'd just as soon
people stayed home," he says. "But a collective decision
has already been made: In the US, we give these people
jobs, if they can get through the gauntlet. We want
borders that don't kill people."
***
Hoover founded Humane Borders, an interfaith group
based in Tucson that set up the network of watering
stations in the spring of 2000, to stem the rising
number of deaths in the desert. Already that year, some
20 people had perished. One incident hit him
particularly hard: A young mother who had given her last
water to her infant. The child survived. She didn't.
Even now, it's at least a 3-1/2 day walk from the
border to the drums at Three Points. But to make it
through the desert, a person on foot needs as many as
eight gallons of water far more than most migrants
expect, especially those who are told by their "coyotes"
(smugglers) that the walk is only 45 minutes.
The terrain here is so forbidding that US
authorities, cracking down on illegal crossings in Texas
and California in the 1990s, assumed that few would try
it. But they do. In the peak season, thousands cross
Arizona's "path of fire" each day. Since 1998, more than
3,100 people have died in the area.
Humane Borders, which now has 63 trained drivers and
some 8,000 volunteers, services 84 water stations on
both sides of the Arizona border. Its pump trucks make
about 750 trips a year. The water tanks are recycled
Coca-Cola syrup drums, painted to keep algae from
blooming.
Last year, Humane Borders also began distributing
maps in Mexico and Central America that show the
location of water stations, US border patrol emergency
beacons, as well as the sites of migrant deaths. "I want
to tell them the information they need to save their
lives," says Hoover. "Not to do so is abuse."
If the red dots marking deaths in the desert aren't a
clear enough warning, the message in bold, in caps,
and in Spanish on each map reads: "Don't do it.
There's not enough water. Don't pay the penalty."
But critics say the existence of such a map sends
another message that there's help in the desert, so
it's possible to cross. "We would not want to give
anyone the impression that the desert is a safe place or
that there are safe avenues through it," says Jarrod
Agen, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland
Security.
In Mexico, support for the Humane Borders agenda is
unambiguous. When Mexico's National Human Rights
Commission announced that it would nominate Hoover and
two Mexican activists for their human rights award, new
Mexican President Felipe Calderσn offered to present the
awards himself last month and did.
But at home in Arizona, the politics of providing
water and maps in the desert rouses strong emotions. "We
have an obligation as a nation to prevent deaths in the
desert, but what Humane Borders is doing is sedition,"
says Chris Simcox, founder of the Minuteman Civil
Defense Corps, the self-styled border watchdog group
based in Scottsdale, Ariz. "They're aiding and abetting
criminal activity by giving out maps."
Hoover has had his share of encounters with
anti-immigration protesters sitting in lawn chairs, and
holding rifles, along the border. He gets plenty of
warnings, too. "Some people send us checks; some send
death threats," he says in his office at the First
Christian Church in Tucson. After appearances on talk
radio, hate mail also arrives on his computer, such as:
"Don't be surprised, reverend, if your church blows up."
He seems unfazed: "You do what you do because of who you
are, not because of who they are."
***
A native of West Texas (and proud of it), Hoover grew
up in Big Spring. He's had previous jobs in nursing,
photography, and commercial construction. He earned a BA
from Texas Christian University, a master's degree from
TCU's Brite Divinity School, and a PhD in political
science from Texas Tech University. He wrote his
doctoral thesis on migration policy and religious
nonprofit groups.
Before moving to Tucson in 2000, he ministered to
border communities in the Rio Grande Valley. The books
in his church office in Tucson range from biblical
studies and ethics to political theory and current
events. When he works late, he listens to Leonard Cohen,
the Canadian poet/singer-songwriter. "Leonard Cohen said
it best: Love is the only engine of survival," he says.
Hoover preaches to his congregation every Sunday.
Much of the rest of the time he's out in the desert in
his double-insulated work boots (to protect against
snake bites) and "Ex Officio" shirts with lots of
pockets (to hold cellphones, GPS devices, and notepads).
Hoover has spent enough time in political science
classrooms to know the competing immigration arguments.
But he believes that Christian teachings trump political
science. "We can analyze these things to death. But
we're left with: What are you doing for 'the least of
these,' " he says, referring to Matthew 25:45.
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Humane borders:
Hoover's group now
services 84 water stations on both sides of the
border, such as this one south of Tucson, Ariz.
ROBERT HARBISON/ SPECIAL TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MONITOR
|
A natural storyteller, with a salty streak, he says
he could not see what he has seen tiny shoes left in
the desert, near-miss rescues, close encounters with
angry critics without a sense of humor. "You have to
have a sense of humor or you'll cry yourself into a
mess," he says.
To be sure, the migration issue isn't only about poor
people seeking a better life. It's also about drugs and
guns, smuggling, human trafficking, and crime. Farmers'
fences get cut, cattle are killed, families robbed.
Debris piles up and so do costs to local communities and
taxpayers.
"There's no one, no one, no one happy with the
migration," he says. "I love the migrants, but I do not
romanticize the migrants."
Nearly 3,000 people were rescued in the desert by the
border patrol in fiscal 2006 alone. Last November,
border patrol agents in the Tucson sector rescued four
Humane Borders members, who failed to return to a water
station. "We all help each other," says Hoover. "They
[the agents] tell me they sometimes drink our water."
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