When Roukhaya found out that she was pregnant, she was still living in the African nation of Chad.

When she found out it was a girl, that's when she says she knew it was time to leave.

In Chad, she explains, female genital mutilation is still practiced. Roukhaya and her husband are both doctors, and they think it is brutal. I ask if she herself was subjected to it. She nods quietly.

"I don't want that for my daughter," she says.

(NPR does not identify survivors of sexual violence, so we are withholding Roukhaya's last name.)

In the last year or so, over 100,000 migrants from all over the world have come to New York City. Some, like Roukhaya, are pregnant, and seeking shelter. NPR spent time with several of these women, their babies, and the team of doctors, nurses and social workers who assist them.

Roukhaya's first stop was at the Roosevelt Hotel in Manhattan. It's the city's Arrival Center — the entry point to New York for all migrants to be registered and access shelters and legal and medical services.

The hotel retains an air of 1920s opulence: massive paintings, glittering chandeliers and sprawling stairways. But these days, it serves as a sort of modern-day Ellis Island. The national guard watches over while thousands of migrants wait to receive medical evaluations and immunizations.

Roukhaya was sent to The Women's Health Medical Center at Bellevue Hospital, part of NYC Health + Hospitals, which is the city's public health system. This is where most migrant women are seen for OB-GYN care.

Staff there told NPR that one of the biggest concerns is the lack of prenatal care in some of the new arrivals. That's a concern that some patients share too.

"It worried me," says Yuniaski López. She apologizes for her voice sounding a little hoarse and explains that she's just exhausted. López is in her mid-20s. She jokes that back home in Venezuela, her mother-in-law was always insisting on a grandchild. She and her husband would tell López that it was not a good time to have a child, between the country's dire economic crisis and government repression.

López says the trip to the U.S. was nearly impossible. "It was so rough," she says. "Especially the jungle. All of it. The train ... it was too difficult. I could hardly bear it. I slept in the streets. I often didn't have enough to eat."

So it scared her when she arrived in the U.S. and found out she'd been pregnant the entire time.

Staff at Bellevue say they are keenly aware that the journey to the U.S. is especially harrowing for women.

In one of the rooms at the Roosevelt Hotel, a woman named Estefani is jovial and talkative. Except when she gets to this part of her story. She stares down at her hands and says: "They got me on my way up."

Estefani and her husband are also from Venezuela. She's a nurse, but it was hard to make ends meet with a new baby. She says that in Venezuela, if you have a kid, you have to choose: Are you going to give them lunch? Or dinner? It probably can't be both.

She was riding the train through Mexico when she was assaulted. Her friend got hurt badly. She says she doesn't mind talking about it, but she doesn't have much more to say. "I don't think about the journey. Or what happened there. I focus on my daughter."

Many sexual assaults happen further south, in the dangerous jungle straddling Colombia and Panama called the Darién Gap. According to Doctors Without Borders, sexual assaults on migrant women and girls crossing the area are prevalent.

"I've met moms who are pregnant as a result of a rape that they've experienced during their migration, which is just so difficult," says Dr. Natalie Davis, associate medical director of ambulatory women's health services at Bellevue. "They're carrying a baby that is a product of a trauma they had along the way."

When a patient mentions assault, NYC Health + Hospitals says they are provided with emotional support as needed. "First, just giving them the space to talk about it, I think that's key," says Michele Maron-Knobel, the social work supervisor for Bellevue's Women's Health Clinic. For all patients who are less than 24 weeks pregnant, there's a discussion about whether the pregnancy is desired. The clinic also has an in-house victims services program, and the Program for Survivors of Torture.

Even for patients who haven't experienced this level of trauma, it's an all-hands-on-deck situation just to get the basics covered. Throughout New York City, mutual aid groups have been essential in assisting mothers with food, clothing, toys, first aid and diapers.

Bellevue refers families to agencies that provide support for first-time moms, pregnancy support groups, and material needs for families. Still, folks at Bellevue say, they are stretched thin and feeling the pressure. "We need more staff," says Maron-Knobel. "It's just not tenable."

The instability of the women's living situations makes even the simple things a herculean effort. Maria Vasquez, head nurse of the Women's Clinic at Bellevue, says many patients don't have a cellphone and are being shuttled around from shelter to shelter. "That has become a problem for us, following the patient. Where have they moved? The number one concern is that the patient come back to us, and continue bringing their babies here."

Davis says her staff has come to care deeply about these women, and there is also a lot of hope here. "These women are strong. It's incredible to think they walked through the jungle. They somehow made it here. They've survived. And this child is kind of a new chance for hope in a new country. And that kind of keeps me going."

In the last year, NYC Health + Hospitals says it has assisted with 300 babies born to asylum-seekers. Staff say they've worked to track women's due dates, arranged appointments and transportation to and from shelters to hospitals, and provided care packages for mothers returning with their newborns. Over 2.1 million baby wipes, 400,000 diapers and nearly 100,000 bottles of baby food and formula.

Some New Yorkers say that's an egregious spending of taxpayer money.

Others say it's the city's humanitarian duty, part of the quintessential American story.

And in the dimly lit, strangely magnificent waiting rooms of the Roosevelt Hotel, it's impossible not to wonder: Where do these people's stories end?

A few days ago, Yuniaski López, the hoarse-voiced woman who was worried about having been pregnant on the journey, gave birth to a healthy baby boy.

Estefani, the woman from Venezuela who shared about her assault, expresses a universal desire: "I'd love to be who I used to be." At the very least, she'd like to work as a nurse again. Maybe taking care of the elderly.

The Biden administration recently extended TPS, or Temporary Protected Status, to some Venezuelans. And, New York state has announced a program for eligible migrants, which promises to open thousands of jobs in industries where there are labor shortages. This could mean López might get a work permit.

For Roukhaya, the woman from Chad, there's not such a clear path. Her baby girl was born a few days ago. In Arabic her name means "love in the sky." Roukhaya sadly observes that she needs a 15-year reprieve: girls generally get circumcised between birth and 15 years of age. In the meantime, she's hoping to get asylum, but she'll be joining over a million applicants who are awaiting processing.

As she breastfeeds, she leans in, and puts her face to her baby's forehead. The chaos of the hotel seems to disappear, and Roukhaya repeats a sort of mantra:

"For her I will do it. For her, I will do everything. Everything possible. Everything."

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Transcript

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

More than 100,000 migrants have arrived in New York City in the last year or so. Among them - women from all around the world, some pregnant and seeking asylum. NPR's Jasmine Garsd has been spending time in Manhattan's migrant intake center. She has the story of three of the city's newest moms and newest New Yorkers. A warning to listeners - this story does contain references to sexual violence.

RHOUKAYA: Hi.

JASMINE GARSD, BYLINE: When Rhoukaya found out that she was pregnant, she was still living in the African nation of Chad. She and her husband are doctors. When she found out it was a girl, that's when she says she knew it was time to leave.

RHOUKAYA: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: Rhoukaya, who learned Spanish when she was studying medicine, was concerned about raising her daughter in Chad, where female genital mutilation is still practiced. I asked her if she herself was subjected to it. She nods quietly.

RHOUKAYA: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "I don't want that for my daughter." NPR does not identify survivors of sexual violence, so we are withholding Rhoukaya's last name. The first place she and her husband were sent to was here.

RHOUKAYA: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: The Roosevelt Hotel in Manhattan. It's the city's arrival center, the entry point for all arriving migrants to be registered and access shelters and legal and medical services. The hotel retains an air of 1920s opulence - massive paintings, glittering chandeliers. But these days, it's a sort of modern-day Ellis Island. The National Guard watches over while thousands of migrants wait to do intake. Rhoukaya was pregnant, so she was sent to women's health services at Bellevue Hospital. That's part of New York City's public health system. It's where most migrant women are seen for OB-GYN care.

YUNIASKY LOPEZ: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: Like Yuniasky Lopez - she's in her mid-20s. She has a cloud of curly hair, and she apologizes for her voice sounding a little hoarse. She says it's from exhaustion. She jokes that back home in Venezuela, her mother-in-law was always insisting on a grandchild. She and her husband would tell her, now is not the time. They left the country because of the poverty and government persecution.

LOPEZ: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "The journey was so rough. The jungle especially. I often didn't have enough to eat." This worried her when she found out she was a few months pregnant. Doctors at Bellevue say the lack of maternal care and the harrowing journey to America are one of their biggest concerns. It goes beyond nutrition. They also see women who've experienced sexual assault. When she gets to that part of her story, a woman named Estefani stares down at her hands.

ESTEFANI: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: She and her husband are also from Venezuela. She's a nurse, but it was hard to make ends meet with a new baby. She says if you have a kid, you have to choose. Are you going to give them lunch or dinner? Probably can't be both.

ESTEFANI: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: She was assaulted while traveling through Mexico.

ESTEFANI: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "I don't think about the journey," she says, "or what happened there. I focus on my daughter." When a patient mentions assault, the hospital says they are provided with emotional support as needed. For patients fewer than 24 weeks pregnant, there is a discussion about whether the pregnancy is desired. Natalie Davis is the associate medical director for Ambulatory Womens Health Services.

NATALIE DAVIS: I've met moms who are pregnant as a result of a rape that they experienced during their migration, which is just so difficult. They're carrying a baby that, you know, is a product of a horrible trauma that they had along the way.

GARSD: But Davis says there is also a lot of hope here at Bellevue.

DAVIS: These women, they are so strong. Some of them, I think the baby is - maybe they would have chosen to terminate. But for a lot of these women, this baby is still wanted, right? They've made it here. They've survived. And this child is kind of a new chance for hope, a new life in a new country. And that kind of keeps me going.

GARSD: In the last year, New York Health and Hospitals says it's assisted with 300 babies born to migrants and asylum-seekers. As some New Yorkers say, it's an egregious spending of taxpayer money. Others say it's the city's humanitarian duty, part of the quintessential American story. And in the dimly lit, strangely magnificent waiting rooms of The Roosevelt Hotel, it's impossible not to wonder. Where do these folks' stories end? Juneski Lopez, the curly-haired woman who was worried about having been pregnant on the journey.

LOPEZ: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: She gave birth a few days ago to a healthy baby boy. Estefani, the woman from Venezuela who earlier spoke to me about her assault, expresses a universal desire.

ESTEFANI: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "I'd love to be who I used to be." She'd like to work as a nurse again, maybe taking care of the elderly. The Biden administration recently extended TPS, or Temporary Protected Status, to some Venezuelans, which could allow her to get a work permit. For Rhoukaya, the woman from Chad, there's not such a clear path.

(SOUNDBITE OF BABY CRYING)

GARSD: Her baby girl was born a few days ago. In Arabic, her name means love in the sky. Rhoukaya is hoping to get asylum, but she'll be joining over a million applicants who are awaiting processing. As she breastfeeds, she leans in and puts her face to her baby's forehead. The chaos of the hotel seems to disappear. Rhoukaya repeats this like a mantra.

RHOUKAYA: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "For her, I will do it."

RHOUKAYA: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "For her, I will do everything. Everything possible."

RHOUKAYA: (Speaking Spanish).

GARSD: "Everything."

Jasmine Garsd, NPR News, New York. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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