Chicago Tribune

Fellowship equips community members as nonlegal representatives in immigration cases

CHICAGO — For as long as she can remember, Martha Armenta felt invisible in the only country she knew as home. She grew up in Little Village, where her parents settled after moving to Chicago from Sinaloa, Mexico, escaping poverty and violence, she said. When she learned in high school she was in the U.S. without legal permission, she acknowledged that the dreams her parents sacrificed for ...
David Flores listens in with other Colibri fellows while attending a retreat at Legal Aid Chicago on Feb. 24, 2023.

CHICAGO — For as long as she can remember, Martha Armenta felt invisible in the only country she knew as home. She grew up in Little Village, where her parents settled after moving to Chicago from Sinaloa, Mexico, escaping poverty and violence, she said.

When she learned in high school she was in the U.S. without legal permission, she acknowledged that the dreams her parents sacrificed for were going to be harder to achieve. Still, she persisted. She managed to go to college working three jobs to pay for it, and in

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune10 min read
After 25 Years Of Selling Tamales In Chicago, An Undocumented Immigrant Mother Returns To Mexico Without Her Family
Claudia Perez’s children could count on one hand the number of times they had seen their father cry. The day their mother left was one of them. Perez had worked her whole life for a dream that did not come true: Save enough money to take her family b
Chicago Tribune4 min read
Paul Sullivan: Pete Crow-Armstrong’s 2-run Home Run — His 1st Big League Hit — Fuels Cubs To 3-1 Win Over Astros
CHICAGO — “Where’s the phenom?” coach Willie Harris yelled outside the Chicago Cubs clubhouse Thursday morning. Moments later, Pete Crow-Armstrong appeared from out of the blue and followed Harris down the tunnel toward the cages. One of the most tou
Chicago Tribune2 min readCrime & Violence
R. Kelly’s Chicago Conviction To Stand After High Court Rejects Appeal
CHICAGO — R. Kelly’s sex-crime conviction and 20-year sentence in Chicago’s federal court will stand, an appeals court ruled Friday in a blistering opinion. “For years, Robert Sylvester Kelly abused underage girls. By employing a complex scheme to ke

Related Books & Audiobooks