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A Chicago perspective on birthright citizenship

Good afternoon, Chicago ✶

Among the slew of executive orders President Donald Trump issued on his first day in office Monday was an effort to end future birthright citizenship for children of immigrants without legal status. 

Trump doesn’t have the lone power to end birthright citizenship, and the order is already facing legal challenges.

A federal judge today temporarily blocked the executive order, ruling in a case brought by Illinois, Washington, Arizona and Oregon.

In today’s newsletter, we’re going beyond the headlines for perspective from a Chicagoan whose parents immigrated to the U.S. in the 1990s.

Plus, we’ve got reporting on a nonprofit sparking teens’ interest in directing films, a new mural brightening up a Chicago Lawn viaduct and more community news you need to know. 👇

⏱️: A 7-minute read

— Matt Moore, newsletter reporter 


TODAY’S TOP STORY

Chicagoans with birthright citizenship fear for ‘future of millions of others like me’ after Trump’s order

Reporting by Kade Heather

Next gen worries: Audrey Setiawan worries about the next girl like her who has waited all her life to vote in the U.S. The 17-year-old from Lincoln Park said she was “definitely shocked” when President Donald Trump signed an executive order this week aimed at ending birthright citizenship.

An American future: “As a first-generation American, I’m kind of terrified for the future of millions of others like me,” said Setiawan, whose parents immigrated from Indonesia in the 1990s. “America is my home. I could never imagine being born here, living here all my life and not being able to enjoy the right to citizenship.”

Key context: The right guarantees citizenship to anyone born in the U.S. regardless of their parents’ immigration status. It is enshrined in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

The stakes: If Trump’s order stands, it would block citizenship for children born after Feb. 18 who don’t have at least one U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident parent. Several state attorneys general, including Illinois’ Kwame Raoul, have filed lawsuits against the order.

READ MORE


WHAT ELSE IS GOING ON?

Galit is among the semifinalists for the James Beard award for outstanding restaurant.

Sandy Noto Photo


OUR CITY IN COLOR 🎨

Pilsen artist Anna Murphy and her mural at 63rd Street and Central Park Avenue

Provided

Chicago Lawn mural shines scenes of nature, childhood on gray viaduct underpass

Reporting by Genevieve Bookwalter

As artist Anna Murphy worked on a Chicago Lawn viaduct mural, there were days the paint would freeze.

“I couldn’t paint if it was below 32 degrees,” she says of the mural she finished in December. 

Yet, as a result of her work, people passing through the viaduct on 63rd Street at Central Park Avenue are greeted with a fantastical and detailed blue-and-white world on a gold background.

The images — children, forests, critters and flowers — stand in stark contrast to the cold and often gray days of a long Chicago winter.

Murphy says she hopes the mural “inspires people to dream and open their hearts and believe beautiful things are possible.”

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BRIGHT ONE ✨

Teens who are part of the nonprofit Luv City film a short film at Primos Pizza in January.

Provided

West Side nonprofit gets teens off their phones and into making movies

Reporting by Anna Savchenko | WBEZ

It’s Saturday morning in a West Loop pizza parlor, and the restaurant is packed with teens. There are cameramen, mic operators and actors. The room buzzes with shouted commands and shuffling feet as the cast and crew shoot a short film called “The Last Slice.”

The film follows several teens working in a pizza shop as they plot their revenge against their Gordon Ramsay-esque boss. The storyline was developed by the teens who are starring in and filming the movie.

They’re all part of Luv City, a West Side nonprofit that enrolls teens in film programming to keep them out of trouble in some of Chicago’s most violent neighborhoods.

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Are you observing Dry January this year? Tell us why or why not.

Email us (please include your first and last name). To see the answers to this question, check our Morning Edition newsletter. Not subscribed to Morning Edition? Sign up here so you won’t miss a thing!


Thanks for reading the Sun-Times Afternoon Edition. 
Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.


Written by: Matt Moore
Editor: Esther Bergdahl
Copy editor: Angie Myers

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