Houston Chronicle Sunday

Wife of detained immigrant rallies supporters to cause.

- By Emily Foxhall emily.foxhall@chron.com twitter.com/emfoxhall

Rose Ascencio-Escobar sat outside an immigratio­n office for two hours after authoritie­s detained her husband. She needed to cry.

Now, the 30-year-old said, it’s time to fight.

Around two dozen supporters gathered Saturday with Ascencio-Escobar outside a detention facility where they once thought Jose Escobar would be held. They had hoped he would be able to hear the voices of his mother, brother and 7-year-old son. They wanted him — and others like him — to knowthey weren’t giving up.

Three days had passed since Ascencio-Escobar, who is a citizen, and her husband, who had been granted temporary protection to live in America, found out during a routine check-in with immigratio­n officers that his protection was being revoked under President Donald Trump’s new guidelines. He has since been taken to a location in Laredo.

The image of her husband being taken brought Ascencio-Escobar to tears Saturday. “This is inhumane, separating families,” she said.

Ascencio-Escobar stressed that her husband is not a criminal. They worked hard, she said, always trying to follow the rules. Jose may not have been an American, but they were living the American dream.

The middle school sweetheart­s met when she was 14. Relatives held large, framed photos of the moments that followed: their wedding, her pregnancie­s.

The family has faith he will return home.

His 2-year-old daughter played with a sign she could not read: “Bring Jose Home.”

His 7-year-old son, Walter, broke down, tried to offer words. Ascencio-Escobar bent down to give him a hug.

Later, she recalled what Walter had told her when she explained why his father wasn’t there: “Mommy, I’ll be the man of the house,” he’d said. “I’ll take care of you.”

But she knows she is the one who must stay strong, for her family.

She had a message for her husband Saturday: “Hold on.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States