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“If I Could Stay” tells two mothers’ stories from inside a broken immigration system
Episode 435

“If I Could Stay” tells two mothers’ stories from inside a broken immigration system

In The NOCO · KUNC

April 2, 20249m 57s

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Show Notes

Most people would agree that the immigration system in the United States is broken… but how it's broken – and how to fix it – are the real debate. As this debate persists, the stories of people caught in a messy immigration web continue to rise. 


The documentary film If I Could Stay tells the story of two such people, Jeanette Vizguerra and Ingrid Encalada Latorre, two undocumented mothers living in Colorado. When they faced deportation and being separated from their young children, they chose to take refuge in churches in Denver and Boulder. 


Ahead of the film's Colorado premiere at CSU's ACT Human Rights Film Festival in Fort Collins, In The NoCo's Erin O'Toole sat down with one of those two mothers who sought sanctuary in 2017, Ingrid Latorre, and Florencia Krochik, one of the film's co-directors.


If I Could Stay
screens during the festival's opening night, Wednesday, April 3 at Colorado State University's Lory Student Center theater.

Topics

Northern Coloradonews