America was built on promises-liberty, justice, and refuge for the oppressed. But beneath those promises, something colder has taken hold.
Beneath the ICE is a pastoral memoir and Christian witness from a son of persecution-one who grew up watching Soviet Union Christianity survive under surveillance, only to encounter a familiar fear within the American immigration system. What begins as a personal story unfolds into a broader moral reckoning with immigration detention, silence, and the quiet erosion of conscience.
Blending memoir, historical reflection, and moral inquiry, this book traces unsettling parallels between regimes that ruled through fear and modern systems that operate beneath the language of law. It examines how families, pastors, and immigrants are drawn into a machinery of suspicion-questioned, detained, and forgotten-while institutions insist that nothing is wrong.
This is not a partisan argument. It is a Christian witness. Written with pastoral clarity and disciplined restraint, Beneath the ICE explores faith and justice, religious persecution, and the tension between conscience and law in a society that often prefers comfort over truth.
For readers concerned with moral accountability, freedom, and the cost of silence, Beneath the ICE offers a sober invitation to look honestly at what lies beneath-and to consider what faith demands when fear becomes normalized.