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Dylan Lopez Contreras sat ready for a replica of his class schedule in a sunny fourth-floor room of his Bronx highschool as his counselor walked in, sporting a “Free Dylan” button hooked up to the strap of his messenger bag.
Dylan stood, and Hedin Bernard lifted Dylan’s more-than-6-foot body off the ground in a good bear hug.
It had been greater than 10 months since Dylan set foot in ELLIS Preparatory Academy, a highschool geared towards older, newly arrived immigrant college students. The final time the 2 had seen one another, Dylan’s hair was dyed purple and simply lined his ears. Now, it fell under the 21-year-old’s shoulders and the purple dye had light to yellow.

Final Might, federal immigration officers arrested Dylan in a Manhattan courthouse after his asylum listening to, making him the primary identified New York Metropolis public faculty pupil detained throughout President Donald Trump’s second time period. The Venezuelan native grew to become the general public face of an aggressive new part of the federal government’s mass deportation marketing campaign, remaining in custody till his launch final week.
After Dylan’s arrest, his mother Raiza’s first name was to Bernard. Ever since then, Bernard has, together with ELLIS founding Principal Norma Vega, led the varsity’s efforts to rally behind Dylan — which included serving to to place Raiza in contact with attorneys and advocates, organizing a pupil letter-writing marketing campaign, and supporting a fundraiser for the household. With Dylan’s return to ELLIS, they hope he can deal with “what is going to occur, not what did occur,” Vega mentioned.

However the jubilation of Dylan’s return has been blended with frequent reminders of the looming risk of immigration enforcement dealing with him and different ELLIS college students.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, launched Dylan whereas he awaits a choice on an enchantment in his asylum case. An immigration decide rejected his declare final yr, and the appeals course of may take years, in keeping with his attorneys from the New York Authorized Help Group. However ICE has the power to take him again into custody at any time and requires common check-ins, his attorneys mentioned.
Shortly after Bernard reunited with Dylan Tuesday morning, as Dylan scarfed down a donut and drank espresso poured from Bernard’s thermos, the counselor invited him to affix a school journey that week.
ELLIS staffers consider that making ready immigrant college students for school is the surest path out of poverty. The journey would go to three faculties in upstate New York.
Dylan glanced down at his leg, the place a black ankle monitor had been hooked up as a situation of his launch. Together with his journey restrictions, Dylan knew he possible couldn’t attend.
However that didn’t decelerate the ELLIS staffers for lengthy. Later that morning, Bernard requested a colleague to ask school representatives to ELLIS, so Dylan wouldn’t have to depart faculty to satisfy them.
Detention Nonetheless Lingers
The swiftness of the modifications over the previous two weeks has been onerous for Dylan to understand.
After months in Moshannon Valley Processing Heart, a Western Pennsylvania detention facility, Dylan had stood at a crowded press convention, flanked by Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Zohran Mamdani, thanking his supporters in Spanish from below the blue brim of a New York Knicks hat.
He had been sleeping on a paper skinny cot in a cell with greater than 70 males. Now he was in his personal mattress, cuddled along with his youthful siblings, ages 8 and 10, who had requested to sleep subsequent to him. And after shedding about 30 kilos in detention as a result of he typically couldn’t abdomen the meals, Dylan had a phalanx of adults at ELLIS showering him with meals, free faculty provides, and affection.
“It’s a giant distinction, to undergo a lot mistreatment, after which come again to individuals who love and help you,” he mentioned in Spanish.
Nonetheless, his ideas drift again to a good friend in detention nicknamed “El Mayor,” or the elder, who has already known as Dylan to let him know the way glad he was to listen to about his launch and to ask if he may use his public profile to advocate for the discharge of others. (Dylan did precisely that at his press convention.) So long as these males stay in detention, Moshannon Valley is “not going to really feel very far-off,” he mentioned.
A spokesperson for the Division of Homeland Safety didn’t reply to questions in regards to the situations in Moshannon.
ELLIS staffers mentioned reintegrating Dylan into faculty will imply serving to him make amends for all he missed over the previous 10 months, whereas additionally processing the continuing trauma of his detention.
Whereas Dylan was incarcerated, his classmates had gone to Washington, D.C., ready for or taken Regents exams they wanted for commencement, and saved up with the guitar classes Dylan loved earlier than his arrest.
Letters from his classmates helped maintain him as his detention stretched from days to months, and his optimism for a fast launch light. He watched new detainees — together with grandparents and younger youngsters — come and go whereas he remained locked up.
Dylan had no formal training in detention. However he was decided to do what he may to maintain up along with his English.
He practiced talking with cellmates from locations like China and the UK and to advocate for higher therapy from the guards.

He devoured Manga and Marvel comics donated by the advocacy group ROCC NYC, which performed a crucial function in supporting his household and holding public consideration on his case. He scoured an English dictionary from the ability’s library to be taught new vocabulary however had nobody to verify his pronunciation. And he tried to learn some classics, reminiscent of Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” and “Chronicle of a Loss of life Foretold” by Colombian creator Gabriel García Márquez.
When he returned to ELLIS final week, Vega stopped him within the hallway at hand him a present from a staffer in her district workplace: a replica of Dante’s “Divine Comedy,” one other traditional Dylan had requested to learn however couldn’t get a replica of.
Dylan, who had fled Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro’s repressive regime, had been kidnapped by a Mexican cartel on his journey to the U.S., and spent 10 months in ICE custody, had mentioned he needed to grasp Dante’s 9 circles of hell.
ELLIS Gears Up
Staffers at ELLIS are accustomed to serving to college students navigate all types of trauma, however they’d by no means had a pupil return from long-term incarceration, Bernard mentioned.
Dylan’s counselors at ELLIS plan to refer him to a Spanish-speaking therapist via a psychological well being clinic positioned on the primary flooring of ELLIS’ constructing, Bernard mentioned. And staffers will look ahead to any indicators that he’s struggling.
They’re additionally hoping to provide Dylan possibilities to get pleasure from himself outdoors educational programs, although his ankle monitor is complicating these plans. His counselor enrolled Dylan in a swim class, however Dylan frightened about getting the machine moist.
Colleges in New York are required to proceed enrolling college students via age 21 — however state legislation doesn’t cease them from staying longer if the varsity agrees, Vega mentioned.
ELLIS staffers don’t need to preserve Dylan in highschool longer than crucial, however are encouraging him to remain for 2 years so he can grasp English earlier than making use of to school.
Within the meantime, he’s desperate to earn cash to assist his mother and siblings with hire. He hopes to take a bartending course so he can work at evening with out interfering along with his faculty schedule.
Dylan labored lengthy hours as a supply driver earlier than his arrest, and Bernard stays involved about how lengthy he’ll need to keep at school.
Staffers at ELLIS are engaged on discovering him an internship that permits him to earn cash whereas studying new expertise and burnishing his school resume.
Dylan mentioned he’s prepared to remain at ELLIS “so long as it takes.”
An Unsure Future
Dylan’s arrest, and the aggressive escalation in immigration enforcement it represented, forged an extended shadow over ELLIS over the previous 10 months, reaching into each facet of its work.
College students had begun to speak extra brazenly about self-deportation. Stress to desert faculty for work grew as college students confronted their diminished prospects for constructing a future within the U.S. And ELLIS’ enrollment, like that at immigrant-heavy colleges throughout town, has declined as border crossings slowed to a trickle.
Lots of the ELLIS college students who greeted Dylan Tuesday with tearful hugs and exclamations like “bienvenidos, loco!” (welcome again, loopy!) had endured their very own brushes with immigration enforcement.
Dylan noticed a good friend whose mom was deported whereas he was in detention, leaving her with out a strategy to pay hire or take care of her toddler throughout faculty hours. Dylan’s good friend Bridget is contemplating returning to Ecuador partly due to the worry of ICE. One other pupil noticed Dylan’s ankle monitor and requested a employees member what the machine did, including that her dad had one too, Bernard mentioned.
And when Dylan greeted two fellow Venezuelan college students, one requested if he’d needed to sleep on the ground — noting that’s the place he’d slept after being detained whereas crossing the border. “I do know the ground,” Dylan responded with a wry smile.
Throughout lunch time, Dylan settled right into a sales space with mates and munched on mozzarella sticks. He had a newfound appreciation for varsity cafeteria meals.
His friendships had been what Dylan missed most about ELLIS, and there was heaps to make amends for. The dialog quickly turned to an abnormal highschool concern: Dylan had to determine what colour to dye his hair subsequent.
Michael Elsen-Rooney is a reporter for Chalkbeat New York, masking NYC public colleges. Contact Michael at melsen-rooney@chalkbeat.org

