Anxieties rise at Detroit haven for asylum seekers
DETROIT — Lucy Neighbor knew that to start over after fleeing torture, bloodshed and repression in her native Cameroon, she needed to find something called Freedom House. She managed to reach the place in 2008, and though she wasn’t exactly sure what it was, she felt at home the moment the door opened.
“When you come here, the person talking to you has so much compassion and love. All the anxiety, all the fear starts just going,” said Neighbor, 41, who became a U.S. citizen last year and now works at a Detroit-area hotel.
Freedom House is a haven in Detroit for asylum seekers that bills itself as the only facility in the U.S. providing temporary housing, legal aid and other services under one roof and at no charge. For more than three decades, the non-profit organization has welcomed immigrants from around the globe, especially Africa, Latin America, South Asia and the Middle East.
But now, residents and staff members are anxious about the future as President Donald Trump tries to close the door to many newcomers to the U.S.


