The Georgia Community Leaders are pushing back on a new ice pack

Community leaders push back to ice attacks

Emigration and customs officers can now enter worship houses to arrange immigrants without papers. The new policy of Trump administration is scared in some Latino and Hispanic communities. A group of Community managers met to wipe over how to push this policy back.

Emigration and customs officials can now enter worship houses to arrest immigrants without papers.

The new policy of Trump administration is scared in many Latino and Hispanic communities.

Local perspective:

A group of community leaders met on Thursday evening to discuss how they can withdraw against this guideline.

The Monte Sinai Church in Norcross was hosting the meeting. Rev. Eli Chavez, the pastor of the church, says that many people in Latino and Hispanic communities are feared that ICE agents can hold individuals in schools and worshipers and initiate the deportation process.

“You are afraid to go to work, to come to worship,” said Rev. Chavez.

Norcross Church publishes people at doors in response to ice attacks

What you say:

Latino and Hispanic clergymen, representatives from Latin American countries and immigration lawyers met in the church to inform worries about what they can legally do to protect their members from deportation and to clarify them about their rights.

“You have the right to be silent; you have the right when you are at home not to open your door,” said Paola Chavarro, an immigration lawyer. “The church can take measures to perhaps close the doors and not to let someone like ice cream into the church.”

“We have people on the door every Sunday to prepare for all inquiries from ice,” said Rev. Chavez.

Community leaders say that many people are so afraid that they will neither work nor work on the church. But they ask people to learn their rights.

The source: Christopher King from Fox 5 spoke during a public discussion about the latest ice attacks across the country with community leaders in Monte Sinai Church.

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