Where Is He Today? Details

Luis Diaz Has Something of a Happy Ending in 'Living Undocumented'

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Oct. 8 2019, Updated 10:Fifty six a.m. ET

Source: Netflix

Netflix's latest docuseries Living Undocumented offers a sobering glance into the truth that immigrants without papers are dealing with this present day within the United States.

The collection appears to be like at 8 different households residing in Texas, California, South Carolina, Maryland, Florida and Wisconsin, and paperwork ten months in their journey to try and stay in the U.S. from April 2018 to January 2019.

Here's what you need to know about Living Undocumented's Luis Diaz and his partner Kenia.

Source: Netflix

Here's what you need to find out about Luis, Kenia and Noah.

Luis is the first person we meet in Living Undocumented, and he explains how he has been operating hard as a building employee, building homes, colleges, parking so much, you title it, since he first arrived from Honduras in 2012.

His commute to the U.S. used to be a harrowing one that took him over a month. He took a number of trains, buses, and even walked for 3 days directly in the barren region. Once he arrived in the States, he went directly to work and could not imagine he'd earned $Forty for a day, a sum he may only have dreamed of again house.

Source: Netflix

A few years after his arrival, his adolescence friend and soon-to-be spouse Kenia arrived to the States from Honduras. Like Luis, she came with out papers. When we meet Luis, Kenia is being detained by ICE in Kansas City, Missouri, and he is making an 11.5 hour pressure to drop off Kenia's son, 3-year-old Noah, who he cares for like his own, to be deported again to Honduras at the side of his mother.

Before she used to be detained, Kenia was once dwelling totally underneath the radar until a routine site visitors forestall took place on how to Luis' brother's wedding ceremony. Although Luis was once using, the entire passengers in his automobile have been ordered to show their papers, something their lawyer says is a new Trump-era protocol. 

The proven fact that Kenia was already pregnant with Luis' baby didn't prevent ICE officials from detaining her, despite the fact that it made discovering legal representation slightly more straightforward.

Where are Luis, Kenia and Noah now?

Once at ICE, where Luis is making plans on dropping Noah to be deported with his mom, the ICE brokers trick Luis into considering that he won't be detained as he's pronouncing good-bye. This seems not to be the case at all, and Luis is detained for 2 months, while the mother and son are sent again to Honduras, and their legal professional is injured by means of ICE officials.

Source: Netflix

But that is not where Luis, Kenia and Noah's tale ends. It's vital to remember the primary lines of Living Undocumented: "You can watch one documentary and you can say, 'Well this is too bad,' but at the end of the day, it's just something that you're watching n TV and you can turn that off and you can go about your life."

Theirs is a in point of fact heartwrenching tale for any viewer who is an immigrant, kid of immigrants, or has even recognized an immigrant in their existence.

When her being pregnant is nearly to term, Kenia hires coyotes, or human traffickers, to help her and Noah depart Honduras once once more as a result of her ex-husband, a police officer, has been stalking her and making her concern for her lifestyles.

The moments when Luis and Kenia are reunited are anxiousness inducing, but also offer a temporary moment of pleasure for audience. As director and producer Anna Chai told Vulture, "When Luis and Kenia got reunited at the bus station, we stopped filming and all of  us in the crew just sobbed for 15 minutes."

Source: Netflix

"The whole time, you're expecting something bad to happen, so when something good happens, you really celebrate, even if it's just for a few minutes," she persisted. "A project like this is never going to leave you. You can't have people bare their secrets and expect that doesn't leave a mark on you."

Luis said in an e-mail to Vulture that he's grateful he participated in the documentary. "We are happy with the idea that the country would understand what we go through as immigrants," he wrote. "I was motivated to take part in this project because I didn't want anyone else to live through the same horrible experiences that I survived with my family."

He added, "For us, the only thing left to do is move past all of that and continue fighting for our happiness."

Living Undocumented is now streaming on Netflix.

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