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If My Father Steps Outside This Church, He Could Be Deported [nytimes.com]

 

NEW HAVEN — For five years, Nelson Pinos, my father, went to regular “check-ins” with immigration officials. Each time, the officials approved his requests to stay in this country. But last October, everything changed. “They want me to leave by November 30,” he told me. “They want me to show them a one-way plane ticket to Ecuador.”

I couldn’t believe it. My father, who came here more than two decades ago and is undocumented, has no criminal record, has always paid his taxes and has three children who are American citizens — me, my 13-year-old sister and my 5-year-old brother. Two weeks later, I watched as an officer snapped a monitor onto my father’s right ankle. When we got home, we wept in each other’s arms.

Going to Ecuador would be devastating for our family. My siblings and I were born in New Haven and our entire life is here. We’re a close family doing exactly what most other American families do: Working and studying hard, having fun. My little brother and sister hardly know how to speak Spanish. In two years I’ll be able to go to college, and my father didn’t want to ruin all that by taking us back to Ecuador.

[For more on this story by Kelly Pinos, go to https://www.nytimes.com/2018/0...ven-deportation.html]

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