Aug 20, 2007 12:10 pm US/Central

Hundreds Protest Deportation Of Immigrant Activist
Son, A U.S. Citizen, Left Behind To Stay With Friends
Kristyn Hartman
Reporting

(CBS) CHICAGO Hundreds gathered in Chicago Monday morning to protest the arrest and deportation of illegal immigrant and immigration activist Elvira Arellano.

She was whisked away to Mexico Sunday after her arrest in Los Angeles. Now immigration activists say they're fight is even stronger.

CBS 2's Kristyn Hartman was at the rally near the immigration offices here in Chicago. She reports that the demonstration was peaceful - yet forceful.

Dozens and dozens of people came to the corner of Congress and Clark to protest the deportation of Elvira Arellano. They support the 32-year-old woman who admittedly re-entered the country illegally to be with her son. Eight-year-old Saul Arellano is a U.S. citizen.

The two of them took refuge more than a year ago at Adalberto United Methodist Church in the Humboldt Park neighborhood to avoid her deportation.

Since then, Elvira Arellano has become the local face, the local symbol, for immigration reform. Last week, she left that church for the first time since seeking refuge to take her message on the road, knowing full well she could be arrested and deported under a 1997 order by federal immigration officials.

Arellano was indeed arrested in Los Angeles, outside a church where she was staying. Her son was there and witnesses say she was calm and kept her composure, speaking to Saul before she was taken into custody and sent back to Mexico.

Arellano's son is being cared for by friends here in Chicago.

It’s not the first time Arellano was deported. She came to Washington state illegally in 1997. She was deported to Mexico shortly after, but returned and moved to Illinois in 2000, taking a job cleaning planes at O'Hare International Airport.

She was arrested in 2002 at O'Hare and convicted of working under a false Social Security number. She was to surrender to authorities last August, but instead took refuge at a Humboldt Park church for more than a year before visiting Los Angeles over the weekend.

Rev. Walter Coleman, pastor of Adalberto Church, said he has spoken with Arellano since she arrived in Tijuana and that her spirits are good.

People at the rally echoed those sentiments.

“Her voice will not be silenced," said Lilia Paredes. "She will, from Mexico, from that border, give and continue to fight for the just cause of the Latinos."

Ald. Ricardo Munoz (22nd Ward), a fellow immigration reform activist, said, "Comprehensive immigration reform is not amnesty. We’re still saying we want to pay the fine, we want to learn English, we want to learn the Constitution. But there just needs to be a path towards citizenship."

Arellano's goddaughter, Tanya Lozano, said, “She's a strong woman and she fights for her people and she has no problem leaving. She's ready to fight, she's in the struggle and she'd going to stay in the struggle."

But Chicago resident Lisa Parker said immigrants should obey the nation’s laws. “Take your child with you, we'll send you some money. Do it the right way and come back in. Let's keep our laws, have some respect."

In a phone interview, Carmen Mercer, a spokeswoman for the Minutmen Civil Defense Corps, a civilian group that tasks itself with enforcing immigration laws, said, "I’m glad our government stepped up to enforce the law and deport someone here illegally. She should take the necessary steps to become a citizen. In the meantime, she can choose not to be separated from her child."

This story is far from over. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials are slated to have a news conference at noon in Chicago to discuss Arellano's arrest and deportation. In a statement, officials already said the arrest went without incident.

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