Reunification Ride helps kids visit moms in Illinois prison

Category: Education/Family

Listening

Unlocking Word Meanings

Read the following words/expressions found in today’s article.

  1. askew / əˈskyu / (adv.) – not straight or at an angle
    Example:

    The painting hung askew on the wall.


  2. reunification / rɪˌyu nə fɪˈkeɪ ʃən / (n.) – the process of uniting again after being divided or separated
    Example:

    Most prisoners look forward to reunification with their families.


  3. incarcerated / ɪnˈkɑr -səˌreɪ tɪd / (adj.) – kept in jail or prison
    Example:

    Some incarcerated men in this prison have been staying here for more than a decade.


  4. business as usual / ˈbɪz nɪs æz ˈyu ʒu əl / (idiom) – used to say that something is working or continuing in a normal way
    Example:

    The city experienced an earthquake this morning, but it’s now business as usual for many stores and companies.


  5. displacement / dɪsˈpleɪs mənt / (n.) – a situation in which people are forced to leave the place they live in
    Example:

    A lot of people experienced displacement and hunger because of the war.


Article

Read the text below.

Dressed in her Sunday best — pink ruffled sleeves and a rainbow tulle tutu — Crystal Martinez’s 4-year-old daughter proudly presents her with a multicolored bouquet of carefully crafted tissue paper flowers. With her 5-year-old son nestled on her lap, laughing in delight, Martinez holds out her arms and pulls the girl into a hug so tight that her glasses are knocked askew.


Martinez’s five children, aged 13, 10, 6, 5 and 4, traveled for three hours from Chicago to visit her in Logan Correctional, Illinois’ largest state prison for women and transgender people, on the Reunification Ride. The donation-dependent initiative buses prisoners’ family members 180 miles (290 km) from the city to Logan every month so they can spend time with their mothers and grandmothers.


The number of incarcerated women in the United States dropped by tens of thousands because of COVID-19. But as the criminal justice system returns to business as usual and prison populations creep back to pre-pandemic norms, more children are being separated from their mothers, putting them at greater risk of health and behavioral problems, and making them vulnerable to abuse and displacement. Black and Hispanic women are more likely to be imprisoned than white women and are affected disproportionately by family separation due to incarceration.


Women held at Logan describe the Reunification Ride — one of the increasingly rare, under-funded programs designed to keep families together — as a crucial lifeline.


“I thank God that it is at least once a month. Some people don’t get to see their kids at all,” said inmate Joshlyn Allen, whose 5- and 3-year-old children were visiting with their grandmother.


The kids and their caregivers meet at 7 a.m. at a South Side big box store parking lot, bleary-eyed but excited. Organizers hand out snacks, games, water and coloring supplies as they get on the road.


Three hours later, the charter bus pulls up at the facility’s barbed wire gates in Lincoln, Illinois, and children peer curiously from the bus windows. As families progress slowly through the intensive security process, shouts of “Mommy!” and squeals of glee fill the prison gym made cheerful with colorful handmade decorations.


This article was provided by The Associated Press.


Viewpoint Discussion

Enjoy a discussion with your tutor.

Discussion A

  • Prisoners held at Logan describe the Reunification Ride as a crucial lifeline. Why do you think this is the case? Discuss.
  • The Reunification Ride is a donation-dependent initiative that transports prisoners’ family members so that they can spend time together. Given the chance, would you donate money for this initiative? Why or why not? Discuss.

Discussion B

  • If you were an organizer of the Reunification Ride, how much time would you allow children to reunite with their prisoner parents? What activities would these families do during the day? Discuss.
  • In your opinion, should a similar program be done in your country or not? Why? Do you think prisoners in your country are given fair treatment? Discuss.