Chicago's immigration court is a place where the lives of thousands hang in the balance. For filmmaker Fatima Omar and Ian Resnick, it's also a story waiting to be told. They're working on a documentary that chronicles the city's response to federal immigration enforcement operations launched here by President Donald Trump.
Omar and Resnick have been documenting Chicago's immigrant community for 12 months, starting with downtown courtrooms and moving out into Little Village alongside rapid response teams. Their film will show what happens when ordinary people find themselves caught in the middle of the White House's deportation campaign.
To capture the scene, they've enlisted the help of courtroom sketch artist Cliff Questel. He sits next to them, drawing a picture of a mother and her two children as they await instructions from the judge, translated into Spanish through an interpreter. For Questel, it's a way to document how the court works and what happens.
The film will also show scenes of everyday life for immigrants living in Chicago, including protests against intensified immigration enforcement. Omar said that the resistance has changed and grown so much, with people trying to keep their neighborhoods safe in innovative ways.
The documentary will be shown at the Edge Theater in Edgewater on Thursday, as part of a test audience screening. The filmmakers are also planning to release clips from the film online, making it accessible to a wider audience. Tickets can be reserved for free online, but the Truth & Documentary team is asking for donations instead of sales.
The final cut of the documentary is expected to be finished by spring, and the filmmakers are now wrestling with how to portray ordinary members of the public when the stakes are so high. They're also looking for moments of humanity and community amidst the chaos.
Omar said that "the one beautiful thing is that the resistance has really changed and grown so much." The film will show the power of people coming together to resist the White House's deportation campaign, and the importance of supporting those who have been impacted by immigration enforcement.
Omar and Resnick have been documenting Chicago's immigrant community for 12 months, starting with downtown courtrooms and moving out into Little Village alongside rapid response teams. Their film will show what happens when ordinary people find themselves caught in the middle of the White House's deportation campaign.
To capture the scene, they've enlisted the help of courtroom sketch artist Cliff Questel. He sits next to them, drawing a picture of a mother and her two children as they await instructions from the judge, translated into Spanish through an interpreter. For Questel, it's a way to document how the court works and what happens.
The film will also show scenes of everyday life for immigrants living in Chicago, including protests against intensified immigration enforcement. Omar said that the resistance has changed and grown so much, with people trying to keep their neighborhoods safe in innovative ways.
The documentary will be shown at the Edge Theater in Edgewater on Thursday, as part of a test audience screening. The filmmakers are also planning to release clips from the film online, making it accessible to a wider audience. Tickets can be reserved for free online, but the Truth & Documentary team is asking for donations instead of sales.
The final cut of the documentary is expected to be finished by spring, and the filmmakers are now wrestling with how to portray ordinary members of the public when the stakes are so high. They're also looking for moments of humanity and community amidst the chaos.
Omar said that "the one beautiful thing is that the resistance has really changed and grown so much." The film will show the power of people coming together to resist the White House's deportation campaign, and the importance of supporting those who have been impacted by immigration enforcement.