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Deep Reads: Cracks in the dream

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Manage episode 497933054 series 2466363
Content provided by The Washington Post. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Washington Post or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

The Vitals had settled in Springfield from Haiti during President Donald Trump’s first term and saved money through the Biden administration. Business leaders in their reliably red county praised immigrants for reviving the local economy. Americans struggled to pass drug tests, one factory boss told a TV news crew. Not Haitians.

Fernande Vital earned $21 an hour at a Japanese automotive plant, monitoring robots forging car parts, while her husband, Rocher, led a strip-mall church. Even as the GOP and some of their neighbors called for mass deportations, the Vitals were sure nobody meant them, immigrants here legally.

So inJuly of last year, they made a down payment of $8,000, their entire nest egg. In August, they moved in, installed lace curtains and hung a family portrait in the dining room. One month later came the cracks.

This story follows the Vitals after they dealt with the structural woes in their home and their feeling of belonging in this country.

Danielle Paquette reported, wrote and narrated the piece. Bishop Sand composed music and produced audio.

Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

  continue reading

1792 episodes

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Deep Reads: Cracks in the dream

Post Reports

2,660 subscribers

published

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Manage episode 497933054 series 2466363
Content provided by The Washington Post. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Washington Post or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

The Vitals had settled in Springfield from Haiti during President Donald Trump’s first term and saved money through the Biden administration. Business leaders in their reliably red county praised immigrants for reviving the local economy. Americans struggled to pass drug tests, one factory boss told a TV news crew. Not Haitians.

Fernande Vital earned $21 an hour at a Japanese automotive plant, monitoring robots forging car parts, while her husband, Rocher, led a strip-mall church. Even as the GOP and some of their neighbors called for mass deportations, the Vitals were sure nobody meant them, immigrants here legally.

So inJuly of last year, they made a down payment of $8,000, their entire nest egg. In August, they moved in, installed lace curtains and hung a family portrait in the dining room. One month later came the cracks.

This story follows the Vitals after they dealt with the structural woes in their home and their feeling of belonging in this country.

Danielle Paquette reported, wrote and narrated the piece. Bishop Sand composed music and produced audio.

Subscribe to The Washington Post here.

  continue reading

1792 episodes

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