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Welcome to the UK

  • September 22, 2020
  • admin

I never knew the name of The Place. But it was about a twenty- minute drive from Gatwick Airport. The neighborhood seemed quite lovely, with its rows of brick houses with large protruding windows and neat rose gardens, just the way I had pictured England all my life.
I was twenty-one years old and had just graduated with a degree in English from the Universidad del Salvador in Buenos Aires. I had a crush on Prince Charles when I was four and my great-grandfather, Leonard, was English. I was certain that my command of the English language, my family background, and my appreciation for Charlie and The Beatles would guarantee me a warm welcome to the UK.
Why didnโ€™t anybody tell me that in this country it was wrong for a foreigner to express a desire to work? Sure, I would have needed a work permit, but I could easily get one. Right? My Italian and Spanish grandparents had all worked in Argentina. Old Leonard had been a businessman in Bolivia. Nobody cared if they came from somewhere else.
But the blonde immigration officer with the boyish face didnโ€™t understand. He wanted to know how much money I had and how long I wanted to stay. I told him I had an open ticket valid for a year and five hundred dollars to my name, which had been wired to a bank in London. It didnโ€™t occur to me that I could have carried my assets in my pocket. Then, when the young fellow asked me if I intended to work in the UK, I answered something like: โ€œIโ€™d love to.โ€
Immediately, an older guy and a woman appeared and whisked me to a room upstairs, where they proceeded to open my suitcase and dump all its contents on a table. They asked me if I knew anybody in the UK and I told them I had a few friends, one of whom worked at the Spanish Embassy in London. Examining every scrap of paper in my possession, the two agents tried to decipher every suspicious word. โ€œWhat does this mean?โ€ asked the guy, pointing at the phrase โ€œsociedad en comandita por acciones.โ€ โ€œAcciones?โ€ I asked. โ€œActions?โ€ he enquired. I realized they were now thinking I was a terrorist. โ€œIn this case it means shares,โ€ I explained.
It was useless. The two agents decided they would put me on a plane back to Buenos Aires first thing in the morning. I refused. There was no way I would let anybody decide my future. โ€œI want to go to Madrid,โ€ I said.
A chubby driver, who spoke cockney, drove me to The Place, as I tried to figure out how I was going to cash my five hundred dollars. There must be a way to transfer it to a bank in Madrid, I thought. Little did I know that all the banks in Argentina would be closed for a week, due to President Perรณnโ€™s death.
The facility where I spent the night was clean and there were a few other undesirables like me. I was the only white person and the only female.
The crisp paper sheets rustled, as I tossed in bed that night. I cried and prayed and pictured my college friends waving good-bye at Ezeiza Airport. Finally, I wiped my tears and stepped onto the cold tiled floor. In the dark, I reached for the door and realized it was locked from outside. I knocked as hard as I could. The door opened and a guard showed me the way to the bathroom. Luckily he didnโ€™t follow me.
As I was waiting for my plane the next day, my friend Monica rushed into the terminal. She gave me a big hug and handed me an envelope with money and instructions for my next destination.
I stayed at a cheap hotel in Madrid for one night and called Ana, whose sister-in-law worked with Monica in London. Without knowing me, Ana took me in and I stayed with her for three months, while I worked at the Argentine Embassy. At the end of my stay in Madrid, I was finally able to cash my five hundred dollars. I bought a ticket to London.
On the ferryboat, I met Bill, a big Irish guy, whose kind words of support helped me face a new immigration officer. This time I was allowed to stay in my great-grandfatherโ€™s country for six months.



M Layton

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