Posted by Alumni from The Atlantic
April 15, 2025
Speaking to a classroom of students at his alma mater, Boston University's School of Theology, Martin Mugerwa described how being a chaplain informs his work as a counselor at a mental-health clinic, where he treats people navigating depression, unemployment, and homelessness. But the campus was whirring with talk of the Trump administration's immigration crackdown, and several international students stayed after class that February evening to ask whether Mugerwa'who is from Uganda'feared that he could be targeted. 'I'm not worried,' Mugerwa told them confidently. 'He's going after criminals.' Mugerwa told me that his outlook on the new presidency, and how it could alter his own fate, changed the next day. His family and a group of friends stopped to see Niagara Falls on their way to visit one of Mugerwa's seminary classmates. But they took a wrong turn and ended up on a bridge that led across the Canadian border. When they told an American customs officer that they wanted to turn... learn more

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