Juan’s fingers interlock as he sits on his living room couch. He squeezes them tighter as he talks about his American journey.
He came to the U.S. from Guatemala more than 30 years ago in search of a better life and became a citizen a decade ago.
But here in Sioux City, Iowa, the immigrants he knows are afraid.
“Many people live with that fear constantly, especially those with families,” Juan said in Spanish.
While Juan speaks fluent English, he chose to do the taped interview in Spanish for fear that someone might recognize his voice. Harvest Public Media is using only his first name, because he doesn’t want to become a target of federal immigration officers.
Now a successful business owner, he worries about his employees who are in the U.S. without legal status.
“If I am afraid for my employees, [it’s] because they are good people,” Juan said.
While raids by federal agents have slipped from the headlines, immigrant communities throughout the Midwest and Great Plains remain on edge. Arrests of immigrants are up sharply since Donald Trump entered his second term in office, according to data obtained by the Deportation Data Project. States including Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas have seen arrests increase by more than 30% as the Immigration and Customs Enforcement operation ramped up.
Meanwhile, immigrant advocates and activists across the central U.S. are working to help their neighbors.











