Gringos in Tijuana Tijuana orphanage, books about TJ, torture, the dump, Zona Norte, the bus from Mexico City, origin of margarita, shoe stores, dentists, La Mesa prison

David Diaz Turn your back on the city, and look the other direction. You know that barren stretch of ground that runs west from the bridge.

Marcos lived for months at the Hotel San Francisco, on Calle Primera, across from La Funeraria San Martin. His room was littered with Argentine novels and Communist literature from Latin America. The hotel was clean, cheap. Walk down the hall, doors open behind you, and guests observe your passage down the hall. You spend many nights at this hotel. In your own small green room, you will listen to the cathedral nearby ringing each hour.

By Abe Opincar, Feb 25, 1988 | Read full article

I had signed up for an experience designed to “sensitize me to hunger..." Photo by Craig Carlson

Forty infants, each in a separate crib, were awakening from naps and taking bottles. Suckling, gurgling, cooing, burping, baby laughter resonated across the one-hundred-foot-long room. The madres, dressed in ankle-length gray-and-white cotton habits, walked quietly. They nodded to us and smiled. The room smelled of talcum powder and warm milk. Mary lifted out a baby who had emptied his bottle. She leaned back into one of the four rocking chairs, the baby against her sweatshirt.

By Judith Moore, June 9, 1983 | Read full article

Torture, Clark claims, plays a commonplace role with the Judicial State Police, the Federal Judicial Police, and, less frequently and less severely, by the Municipal Police of Tijuana. Troy Matthews

“They hit me in the bathrooms of the [judicial police] office. They grabbed me by the shoulders and kneed me in the chest, and they lifted me up and punched me in the stomach. They slapped me a lot and kicked me in the legs and shins. In the bathroom they took a water hose, a tube, and turned on the water and put it up my nose and left it on for a minute.”

By Abe Opincar, June 14, 1990 | Read full article

Kids are brought to the room, 15 at a time, and they turn over their tickets as they file in. They are free to choose whatever catches their fancy.

14 people have died of the cold in Tijuana. Eight babies died of exposure on Christmas Eve alone. A desperate 24-year-old prostitute, faced with a newborn baby she couldn’t care for, wrapped it up, put it in a box, and stuffed the box in a trash can near the Tijuana bus terminal. Fortunately for the baby, someone heard it crying and lifted the lid of the can. The woman is being sent to prison for three years.

By Luis Urrea, March 7, 1991 | Read full article

All over the Zona Norte familiarity and lack of self-conscious shame make the sex district unexpectedly childish. Raul Rodriguez

There are the languid, middle-class Mexican couples out for a mild thrill. There is the perilous bar filled with courtesans looking for a casual kill. There are the small-time bosses, cement nabobs and refrigeration barons in their topaz cuff-links and string ties. And there, at odd tables, are the spreads of ice buckets, half-hacked lobsters, and bottles of Taittinger, laid on for his belle by some balding tycoon of the Tijuana construction boom.

By Lawrence Osborne, March 26, 1992 | Read full article

The crowds destined for Tijuana and Guadalajara are the largest in the bus terminal. Photo by Robert Burroughs

“Don’t let them tell me the bus is new. Of course, we always get there on time; it’s just on the way there are, well, complications. It’s in the nature of the route. God didn’t intend a road through here — look around you. If you stopped for an hour, the forest would eat you. Now, Nature takes care of these things. All these people hurtling to the north: it’s madness.”

By Lawrence Osborne, Apr. 2, 1992 | Read full article

Margarita

“Now, I first visited Tijuana and Ensenada in 1937 and spent a lot of time there in the late ’30s and the ’40s, when I was working for CBS in Los Angeles. I first encountered the margarita cocktail around 1940, and I’ve watched its whole progress as it made its way up Baja and into California. Back in the ’30s and ’40s, Americans did not drink cocktails — bourbon, scotch, rye whiskies were what Americans drank.”

By Margot Sheehan, May 21, 1992 | Read full article

Like most San Diegans I didn’t have a clue as to what the La Mesa prison was like. These guys filled me in as best they could. I had a hard time believing the stories. Photo by Robert Burroughs

The guy who did the shooting was taken to Las Tumbas. The comandante interviewed him personally. He told the comandante that he expected to spend the rest of his life in the Tombs, and there was no way he was giving up his Uzi. He will do better than most guys there. The guards and the other prisoners respect him. The last time I saw him, he had the first cell in the Tombs all to himself.

Anonymous, June 25, 1992 | Read full article

Gringos have a strangely difficult time with the bizarre details of the daily life of Latinos. Photo by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.

The banana trees in the yard bore fruit; the trapezoidal neighbor’s house refused to fall; Margo developed a marvelous skill for talking to birds — she could make them land on her fingers. Ernesto James ran out of bullets. Tijuana’s Christmas decorations got fancier year by year, then grew old and faded and tattered. Margo moved away. Her mother moved away. The second-story dogs grew old and died. The tortilla shop’s women were replaced by a machine.

By Luis Urrea, Oct. 8, 1992 | Read full article

If you’re just a working manjack who demands a bit of good boot leather, Tijuana’s your stop. Photo by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.

He sees me fondling a pair of alligator boots and points out that they aren’t really alligator. “Right, Umberto?” Umberto agrees that alligator is too expensive and that the leather is imprinted, or stamped, with the alligator pattern. He turns to his mother. In Spanish he asks her if that isn’t right, that the pattern is stamped by machine? She nods and makes a pulling gesture with her arm to indicate a punch-press machine action.

By John Brizzolara, Oct. 15, 1998 | Read full article

"They come here because they like our work, and it’s cheaper than the United States." Photo by Sandy Huffaker, Jr.

In the middle of the room sat a reclining dentist’s chair with leaking upholstery, one of those giant dental klieg lights. A poster of some swimsuit model, the kind of poster you’d expect in an auto mechanic’s garage. The only other features in the room were an unmade single bed, a dirty plate on the floor from breakfast — looked like eggs, tortillas, and beans — and five empty Carta Blanca bottles situated around the room like hollow sentinels.

By John Brizzolara, April 29, 1999 | Read full article