Sometimes the most devastating part of a story is its simplest sentence.
“I feel safe here.”
That is what Venezuelan makeup artist Andry José Hernández Romero reportedly said after arriving in Spain to seek asylum (Guardian).
For most people, those words might sound ordinary.
For him, they are extraordinary.
Hernández Romero originally fled Venezuela after facing persecution as a gay man and because of his political views.
He sought asylum in the United States hoping for protection.
Instead, his journey became an international human rights story.
He was deported to El Salvador’s infamous CECOT mega-prison after U.S. authorities allegedly linked him to gang activity.
Much of that suspicion reportedly centered on crown tattoos, which Hernández Romero and supporters said reflected family and cultural symbolism rather than criminal affiliation.
His case became emblematic of the human consequences of aggressive immigration enforcement.
Images of detainees being processed inside CECOT shocked people around the world.
Human rights groups later raised serious concerns about abuse, mistreatment, and due process failures involving deportees held there.
Hernández Romero was eventually released and briefly returned to Venezuela.
But safety remained fragile.
Now he has reportedly started over yet again, this time in Spain.
Stories like this often become flattened into political argument.
Immigration policy.
Border security.
Legal process.
International diplomacy.
All of those conversations matter.
But for LGBTQ+ people, there is often another reality beneath them.
The reality of what it means when simply existing openly can place you in danger.
Seeking asylum is not usually about adventure.
It is about survival.
That is what makes Hernández Romero’s story hit so hard.
Because whatever people believe politically, the emotional truth remains difficult to ignore.
A gay man fled fear.
Was treated like a threat.
Survived something horrific.
And now measures hope in four simple words.
“I feel safe here.”
📷 Immigration Defenders Law Center







