
""He's comfortable being alone. He cooks for me and helps clean. He's a homebody.""
""In his hometown, Andry was a member of a local theatre troupe... He loved to draw, and had a penchant for bringing aesthetic flourishes to every corner of his life.""
The situation for Venezuelans in El Salvador has deteriorated, with the President invoking laws to imprison them without due process. The article draws attention to personal stories, particularly that of Andry José Hernández Romero, who faces imprisonment in the U.S. while his family copes back home in Venezuela. Andry's humble character and creative pursuits stand in stark contrast to the oppressive regime he fled, highlighting the complex realities of migration and the human cost of political repression.
Read at The New Yorker
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