She was 19 years old and had already lived through more than most people ever will. Her family grew up under repression and torture in the Democratic Republic of Congo before making the decision to leave everything behind. The journey to the United States was supposed to be the hardest part. It was not.
During the crossing, the family’s youngest child, 8 years old, died. His death marked the most devastating point of a passage that had already cost them enormously. When they finally arrived in Maine, they carried that grief into a new country that did not yet feel like home.
Three years of rebuilding, then an arrest
For three years, the family worked at putting a life together in Maine. They were among thousands of immigrant families from Central Africa who settled in the state, drawn by its resettlement infrastructure and its communities of fellow Congolese immigrants. They were not there long before those efforts were interrupted.
In November 2022, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested the family. The youngest daughter was taken into ICE detention and separated from her relatives. The emotional weight of that separation landed on top of everything else she had already been carrying, the death of her brother, the trauma of leaving the Congo, and the fragile sense of stability the family had begun to construct.
A pattern that plays out across the country
This family’s experience is not isolated. Immigrant families from conflict zones regularly arrive in the United States after years spent in refugee camps or transit countries, many with pending asylum cases that take years to resolve. During that time, they build lives, enroll children in school, find work, and become embedded in their communities. Enforcement actions that separate them midway through that process have drawn consistent criticism from immigration attorneys, resettlement organizations, and medical professionals who work with trauma survivors.
Advocates argue that the immigration court backlog, which stretched to several million pending cases in recent years, leaves families in legal limbo for so long that enforcement actions effectively punish them for a system’s delays rather than any action of their own.
What support has looked like on the ground
In Maine and in cities across the country, local organizations have stepped in where federal policy creates gaps. Resettlement agencies, legal aid groups, and church communities have taken on roles that range from emergency housing and food assistance to navigating the paperwork-heavy process of applying for asylum or appealing deportation orders.
For families like this one, that support often arrives in pieces, sufficient to address an immediate crisis but rarely enough to provide the long-term stability that resettlement requires. The gap between what is needed and what is available remains wide.
The cost of the policy as it stands
What makes cases like this one difficult to categorize within any simple policy framework is their specificity. This family is not a statistic or a talking point. They lost a child getting here. They spent three years building something in a state that had agreed to receive them. Then they were detained and separated.
Immigration enforcement policy in the United States has remained a source of sustained political disagreement, with significant shifts between administrations in how priorities are set and which families face the most immediate risk of removal. What has remained consistent across those shifts is the human cost absorbed by the people caught inside the system while that argument continues.
This family’s story does not resolve neatly. It does not have a tidy conclusion. It is still happening, as are thousands of others like it across the country, in detention centers and courtrooms and apartments where families wait for a decision that will tell them whether they get to stay.

