Get to know immigrants through stories
Maria came to the United States in 1985 from El Salvador. Guerrillas threatened to kill Maria and her family if she refused to help them. When Maria refused to help, they burned her corn field and killed her neighbors. Maria fled for her life and filed for asylum in the United States. Maria’s asylum was denied, but when the American Baptist Church filed a class action suite, she joined it, and they won, enabling her to refile her asylum application. This allowed her to apply for a work permit each year; but no action was taken by Immigration on her asylum petition. Finally, in 2005 she had her asylum interview and the judge denied her plea, stating that there was no longer any danger to her in El Salvador.
Before her court date, Maria had contacted Justice For Our Neighbors and they found that she was eligible for Legal Permanent Residence under the Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act (NACARA). JFON was able to terminate her removal so that she could apply under NACARA, and helped her with the application and 120 pages of supplemental documents and information needed by Immigration. In May 2009, Maria was granted legal permanent residency. After all these years, Maria can live a little more at peace with her husband and four U. S. citizen children.
NACARA is a special program designed for people from Central America who fled to the U.S. because of persecution and filed asylum claims before 1990.



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