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US-Mexico border park – a long way from the ‘pinky kiss’

Locals on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border have long known Parque de la Amistad, or Friendship Park, as an unofficial international meeting space between San Diego County and Tijuana. Family members without permission to cross once touched fingertips – to “pinky kiss” – through mesh. But access has evolved over the years, and the park is officially closed on the U.S. side. Local activists are protesting a federal construction project of two new replacement fences. They want visits to resume as soon as possible on the San Diego County side.

The Mexico side, however, remains public and vibrant, with photo-snapping tourists, a tended garden, and a muraled stretch of border fence that backdrops the weekly Border Church. The place remains a witness to border policy penned a few thousand miles away and a solace to the lives shaped by that policy. Those who can’t join loved ones on the other side can at least unite in solidarity here.

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Locals on the U.S.-Mexico border have long known Friendship Park as a space of unity. But times have changed, and the park, which links San Diego County and Tijuana, is under construction – and protest.

It’s an ethos of openness that the Rev. Guillermo Navarrete takes to heart in his open-air church, where congregants gather beneath a white lighthouse.

“I have no wall. I have no roof,” says the Border Church pastor. “My limit,” he says, pointing upward, “is the sky.”

Worshippers murmur prayers near a Tijuana beach, hands pressed on rusted slats. The border fence before them continues toward the roar of waves, ending in the ocean.

Everyone is welcome at the outdoor church on the western end of the U.S.-Mexico border. The service and its setting – the binational Friendship Park – have long lured those with stories of separation and of dashed dreams of America. One of the visitors is Veronica Martinez, whose family lives north of the border.

Extending her palms toward the fence one recent Sunday, she mentally travels: “I just kind of transported myself to the other side.” 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Locals on the U.S.-Mexico border have long known Friendship Park as a space of unity. But times have changed, and the park, which links San Diego County and Tijuana, is under construction – and protest.

In the 1980s, Ms. Martinez’s Mexican mother crossed the border unlawfully with her as a child to reunite with her father in the United States. The child grew into an adult who started her own family in the U.S. and built a life of her own over three decades there. But Ms. Martinez was never able to change her unauthorized status. Since deciding to visit her mom back in Mexico in 2019 before she died, Ms. Martinez has not been able to legally rejoin her American family.

“It was a big decision between my daughters and my mom,” says Ms. Martinez. “I just want to see them and hug them. … I feel like I’m drained.” Her clothes match the colors of the country that won’t take her back: red-and-white blouse, blue denim vest.

Sarah Matusek/The Christian Science Monitor

The interdenominational, bilingual Border Church holds its weekly service at Friendship Park in Tijuana, Mexico, April 30, 2023. Another service is held in solidarity beyond the border, on the California side.

Locals on both sides of the border have long known Parque de la Amistad, or Friendship Park, as an unofficial international meeting space. Family members without permission to cross once touched fingertips – to “pinky kiss” – through mesh. But access has evolved over the years, and the park is officially closed on the U.S. side. Local activists are protesting a federal construction project of two new replacement fences. They want visits to resume as soon as possible on the San Diego County side.

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