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Mother’s Day Behind Bars

Published on Monday, May 2, 2016 | 1:19 am
 

Maria may never see her children again. They were born in America but she was not. When released from the sentence she is serving in a California State Prison she, according to speculation by folk knowledgeable with these situations, will be deported to her home country.

Celebrating Mother’s Day is pretty much a no-no for her as it is for most of the inmate mothers I spend Saturdays with, presenting successful child-raising practices and understanding that though the women were charged with a crime, the crime most times has nothing to do with their relationship with their children.

Belinda spent two years living in a car with her two young children. Changing diapers in the back seat, measuring out breakfast cereal into plastic bowls that she continually washed and kept put away in a special box labeled “kitchen stuff.”

Shanika hasn’t seen her kids since she was transferred to a prison in Southern California. But when in prison in Northern CA, near her hometown, the kids came to visit with their grandmother on a regular basis.

Ah, did somebody say Happy Mother’s Day?

Well, often in the parenting classes I provide at a state prison, many of the mothers aren’t sure if they can still be called “Mom.”

“I think my kids got adopted, but I’m not sure,” Is a familiar discussion point.

“My kids were adopted and I want to know how to locate them,” is a regular heartbreaking question.

Adoption is final and neither the inmate mom or anyone else gets the opportunity to track the kid’s whereabouts.

For the mothers who aren’t sure, someone labeled attorney or someone bearing the title social worker, neglected to keep the Ms Moms advised of their parental rights, of court procedures and of all matters that would have kept them abreast of their status.

Then there are the inmates in silent battle with relatives the court has appointed to care for their children while they are incarcerated. All too often, distant cousins, aunts or grandparents are low-income and in need of the money paid to caregivers.

All for the dollar, it becomes advantageous for caregivers to turn children against a mother who is behind bars and work for their own financial circumstances to keep the children even after Mom’s release.

Women make up the fastest-growing prison population in America. The 215,000 behind the walls constitute 1/3 of all female prisoners in the world. According to reports, 65% of incarcerated women are mothers.

Would anyone dare to suggest a Happy Mother’s Day for America’s 65%?

And what about their children? Oh, maybe some of them will send a card. Maybe some will go to visit. Maybe too many children have forgotten who she is.

Since 2010, Talk About Parenting with Shirlee Smith has been providing parenting classes at California Institution for Women in Chino, California. Over 500 mothers have completed 20 hours of course work and received certificates.

 

Shirlee Smith is a former Pasadena Star-News Opinion Columnist. She is a Los Angeles Press Club first place awardee and author of They’re Your Kids, Not Your Friends and the Spanish edition, “Son Tus Hijos, No Tus Amigos.”

 

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