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Tres hermanos desaparecieron jugando — 9 años después uno llama desde el mismo parque

  And little Sofia, barely 7 years old, was the light of their eyes, with her messy pigtails and that smile that melted hearts. If you enjoy these kinds of stories, don’t forget to subscribe to the channel and let us know in the comments what part of Mexico or the world you’re watching from.  Your support helps us continue telling these stories that need to be remembered.

Guadalupe remembered that moment perfectly.  She had been chatting with her godmother Esperanza.  No, she mentally corrected herself with her godmother Carmen about the problems at her husband’s job in the textile factory. The conversation had become intense when they were talking about staff cuts and the threats of closure that were looming over the company.

  That’s why she didn’t immediately realize that her children had stopped making noise near the swings.  When she turned to look for them, she felt that pang of panic that every mother knows.  The swings were empty.  He scanned the entire playground.  The up and down, the slide, the rusty carousel that creaked in the wind.  Nothing.

  He jumped to his feet, his heart already beating wildly.  “Carmen, have you seen my children?” he asked, trying to keep his voice calm.  Her godmother also got up, scrutinizing the park.  Just a moment ago they were there playing hide-and-seek with other kids. Other parents joined the search, checking every corner of the park: behind the Jacaranda trees, under the benches, in the smelly public restrooms.  Nothing.

  The Jardines de Morelos neighborhood, where the park was located, was not exactly the safest in Ecatepec. Drug dealing problems had increased in recent years, and disappearances of people, unfortunately, were not new news.  But Guadalupe never thought about what could happen to her, to her family. One always thinks that these tragedies happen to others.

  After an hour of desperate searching, someone suggested calling the police.  Carmen had already dialed from her cell phone, but the officer’s response had been discouraging. Ma’am, 72 hours have to pass to officially consider a disappearance.  The children probably went to stay with a relative. Raúl arrived running to the park half an hour after Carmen called him.

Her husband was a robust man, hardened by years of work in the factory.  But when she saw him arrive, Guadalupe noticed that his hands were trembling and his face was distraught. Together they explored not only the park, but the entire neighborhood.  They knocked on doors, asked neighbors, checked every little shop, every taco stand, every corner where their children might have taken refuge.

Night fell on Ecatepec with no news of Daniel, Miguel, and Sofía. Guadalupe couldn’t eat, couldn’t sleep, couldn’t do anything but cry and pray in that two-bedroom house that suddenly felt so empty without the laughter of her children.  The small beds, the toys scattered on the floor, Miguel’s homework half-finished on the dining room table.

  Everything seemed frozen in time, waiting for a return that did not come that night.  The next day, before dawn, Guadalupe was already back in the park.  This time she wasn’t alone.  Her sister Rosa had arrived from Nesaualcoyotl and her mother-in-law, Doña Amparo, had taken the first bus from Chalco.  The women of the family organized themselves like a silent but determined army.

Rosa brought copies of photographs of the children, while Doña Amparo had prepared thermoses of coffee and cakes for the volunteers who had joined the search. “In this country, if you don’t look for yourself, nobody will look for you,” murmured Doña Amparo with the bitterness of someone who has lived too many years in a Mexico where impunity is the norm.

  The Morelos gardens community rallied to support the family.  Don Esteban, the owner of the stationery store on the corner, donated materials to make posters with the children’s photographs.  Doña Refugio, who sold quesadillas outside the elementary school, refused to charge the volunteers for the meals. And Father Miguel from the parish of San José organized prayer chains that spread through several neighboring communities.

The posters began appearing all over the metropolitan area. The smiling faces of Daniel, Miguel, and Sofia multiplied on lampposts, bus shelters, market walls, and store facades. Have you seen them?, the text asked in red letters along with Guadalupe and Raúl’s phone numbers.  But the days passed without any solid leads.

Local police eventually opened an investigation, but the officers who showed up seemed more interested in suggesting that the children might have run away from home than in conducting a serious search. The Public Prosecutor’s Office asked them for documents, more documents, repetitive statements that led nowhere.

  Did the children have problems at home?  Had they argued with you?  Did they use drugs?  Guadalupe was hurt more by the questions from the Public Prosecutor than by the stabbings, as if it were her fault, as if her 12, 9 and 7-year-old children were juvenile delinquents instead of victims.

  It wasn’t until the second week that a credible witness appeared.  Doña Matilde, a 70-year-old woman who walked her dog in the park every afternoon, remembered seeing the three children get into a white panel van.   ” I thought it was their dad who had come to pick them up,” she declared with teary eyes.  The children got on by themselves without anyone forcing them.

  That’s why it didn’t seem strange to me.  Raúl began to travel the streets on his beat-up motorcycle looking for that phantom truck.   He stopped going to work, which meant the family was left without income just when they most needed money for search expenses.  The savings vanished on gasoline, photo copies, food for the volunteers, and the fees demanded by some corrupt police officers .

  to accelerate the investigation.  The story of the Morales brothers began to appear in the local media.   It started as a small note in the police section of the Catepec daily newspaper .  Then a mention on the regional television news program. Guadalupe learned to speak in front of the cameras, to control the tremor in her voice, while pleading for information about her children.

  “We just want to know what happened to them,” he said, holding the photographs to his chest.  “If anyone has them, let them go. They are innocent children, they haven’t hurt anyone.”  Groups of mothers of the disappeared.  They took up the case of the Morales brothers, organizing marches and sit-ins in front of government offices.

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