By Victoria Tester  
Three hundred  and fifty  children who are U.S. citizens live in Palomas and attend  school on the U.S. side in Columbus, where on June  11, when school  ended, many lost their only meal of the day, as have most of  the  remaining estimated 2,500-3,000 children in Palomas. 
When  the work of 
La Luz de  La Esperanza Palomas Outreach first started six  years ago, it was hard but not impossible to  accomplish our work of  addressing need in Palomas. We operate a daily meal program for  seniors  and the disabled, and we do emergency family food distribution.  
Unfortunately,  during  recent years, due to cartel violence and the consequent high  unemployment and high numbers of disappearances  or murders of family  providers, hunger has escalated to such a degree  that we are finding  2010 to be plainly the worst so far.
This violence in  Palomas and the subsequent hunger are unreported or vastly  underreported, due to the brutal murders of so many journalists in  Chihuahua, and the danger faced by U.S. journalists who try to go there.  We did take Channel 7 out of El Paso  crew Tom Scott and Jill Galus  into Palomas at the end of May 2010, where even as we were put under  police  guard in the highly tense situation they documented some of our  story.
We are writing to you out  of grave need,  overwhelmed by the number and circumstances of extreme cases of hunger  presented to us.
Through the Outreach’s  trained  promotoras who go into homes and work confidentially with families to  identify and report on  need, we’re receiving information that families  are eating rats, or surviving on horsemeat, mothers sending their  children to bed early, with only a  teaspoon of sugar as their food for  the day.  Families without refrigeration (we estimate a quarter to a  third of the families are now either without electricity or else without  water as they used their money to buy food  instead) are forcing  themselves to eat spoiled food that they reboil in order not  to waste. 
We  have reports of mothers  unable to nurse their infants because their  own basic nutritional needs are not met, and with only cornmeal and  water or else plain  water to feed their  infants. 
We  are hearing about  mothers of families turning in desperation to  prostitution, to feed their children. 
We have  personally  witnessed the grief of families in Palomas who cannot even  help their suffering relatives, for fear of literally  starving their  own children. A mother told us recently that children felt fortunate  that  they had at least a bowl of eggs in their otherwise empty  refrigerator, because “we go to our aunts and uncles houses, and they  have nothing.
Even in the face of the  very high  unemployment, in the last two years food in Palomas has become as or  more expensive as it is in  the United States. Beans that two years ago were 75 cents a kilo in Palomas are now a 1.85$.  Milk in Palomas is  between 4 and 5 dollars a gallon.  Most people no longer have meat or milk in their diets.
Many of the people who come  to us  for food are mothers whose spouses have disappeared, murdered in the  drug violence, or who have  abandoned their families, unwilling to watch  them starve, or they are the elderly  parents of sons who’ve  disappeared or been murdered, and these mothers and elderly are utterly  without resources. 
One of the main tasks of  the  Outreach is to distribute emergency food to many families who can show  they would have no food otherwise. Our most current experience records  this figure at approximately 325 families in  Palomas in dire need of  emergency food. Early this June, the day after the  Outreach did a  distribution of 3 to 4 days of food to over 250 recorded families,  approximately 75 more families applied to us because they were   completely without food. We had no food left to give them. 
We  are devastated by our  inability to help so many Palomas families now living near starvation level.
Our most immediate  concern  is that of the needs of the estimated 2500-3000 children who  lost their only meal of the day when  school ended.
We  are in the second week  of our new Meals for the Children program,  during which from June 14 to July 16 we are distributing 1500  boxed  meals a day Monday through Friday to school age children at three   locations in Palomas, the Outreach building on Buenaventura Street, the  Main Plaza  where the Catholic church is located, and in Pancho Villa  Plaza, near Ford  Elementary school. We now find we will lose 500 of  those meals on June 25, and have no means of replacing them.
So  far we also have no  means to continue this program or any program of  this scale from July 17 to August 22,  the last crucial five weeks  before school starts again. We are deeply  fearful that most children in  Palomas will then be utterly without a meal. 
We hope  you will agree this  situation should not be tolerated.
On  behalf of the people of  Palomas we beg for your help in addressing  this extreme suffering in our neighboring border town.
(The author is U.S. Coordinator for La Luz de la Esperanza Outreach of Palomas, a U.S.  secular nonprofit operating inside Palomas, Chihuahua on Buenaventura Street.  The piece is based on a letter that she wrote to New Mexico Cabinet Secretary John Garcia.
The above photo is a mural of St. Francis at a chapel on the premises of La Luz de Esperanza Outreach)
 
La Luz de la Esperanza
P.O. Box 38
Columbus, NM 88029