Isabella Yan || EXECUTIVE ARTICLE
In just two days, an Andover High School student’s life was overturned. Now, as he packs his school bag and gets ready for school, a quiet unease lingers throughout his home. In the hallways and bedroom once filled with warmth and presence, there is an emptiness––a constant reminder of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents who changed his family permanently.
Last year, the student’s mother, father, and brother were detained by ICE, and his father was deported. “My family really didn’t know what happened,” he said, recalling the immediate fear and panic that came upon him. In the coming days, he would learn more about what unfolded.
“Open the car! Open the car! I’ll break the window!” Immigration agents yelled as they halted his mother’s car outside their home as she was driving to pick up his brother, the AHS student recalls being told later. According to the student, agents grabbed his brother out of the car and pinned him onto the ground, placing handcuffs on his brother’s and mother’s wrists. However, this wasn’t the first incident the student had known about. Just a day earlier, his father was also detained outside of their home, and all three of his family members were sent to a detention center. While his mother and brother were later released, his father was deported.
According to the US Department of Homeland Security, nearly three million undocumented immigrants have been deported from January 2025 to January 2026 as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration. While specific deportation statistics are difficult to isolate, a WBUR analysis found that in Massachusetts alone, there have been more than 7,000 ICE arrests under the current administration.
Despite these striking numbers, in the town of Andover, conversations surrounding ICE are often far removed. The perception that these issues do not directly affect the community may make it easy to detach from topics like immigration enforcement––experiences that appear to exist elsewhere. While stories like these may be few in number in Andover, the impact and emotional burden of ICE is very real for residents like this student and his family, shaping his daily life in ways often unseen by others in the community.
“[I just experienced] fear and sadness that my dad isn’t here anymore,” the student said, describing how the pain of the incidents and his family’s separation weighed heavily as he became withdrawn from his schoolwork. “It grew a fear in me that [the same situation] could just happen to me anytime. I really…wasn’t really paying attention in school and my grades just went really low.”
Following the incidents, the student’s counselor became aware of his situation and informed his teachers. He shared that the support he has received at AHS has alleviated some of the distress he has experienced in balancing school. “[The teachers] understood and they helped me,” he said.
In response to federal immigration policies, Andover Public Schools (APS) has established its commitment to ensuring safety and support for all students. “[At AHS], school counselors collaborate with school social workers and administrators to help support each student and their individual needs,” guidance counselor Kimberly Bergey said.
According to aps1.net, APS also follows guidance from the Massachusetts Commonwealth’s Attorney General and the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education regarding protection of students and their information.
Within these guidelines, many teachers at AHS have remained dedicated to supporting the well-being of students who are undocumented or have families that are undocumented, with some banding together to develop and exchange strategies. “Above all, we want students and their families to be safe and to feel safe…and focus on their education, which is their right,” said history teacher Kathryn Reusch. “All students deserve to feel safe and feel like they belong and that they matter.”
The student reflected on how he has observed other students making wrongful assumptions about immigration enforcement and people in his situation. “Kids here … [believe] we are getting rid of criminals,” he said. “But in reality, most immigrants aren’t here just to be criminals. We come here … to have a better life than in our home country and also make more opportunities for our future generations.”
Reusch also emphasized the importance of education about legal and undocumented immigration to counter these misconceptions. “The more we can teach the facts about immigration … the more we can hopefully dispel the rampant misinformation that breeds prejudice, racism, and bad policy,” she said, pointing to research that both legal and undocumented immigrants commit fewer crimes than native-born Americans, and contribute significantly to the U.S. economy.
As decisions about immigration enforcement continue to take shape at both a federal and local level, this student’s story serves as a reminder of the life-altering consequences of these policies for individuals and families, and the lived-experiences of the people often shrouded behind statistics and headlines.



