Saturday, October 24, 2009

Asylum-seekers to achieve their dream, but now there is no

After years of the plan Dzhilda Ghanipour found by a retired judge with immigration Pepperdine students who support the law and the desire for asylum. She won the case. But did not know it.Gilda Ghanipour spent the past nine years of the plan.

Abandoned by his family for a Muslim who converted to Christianity, and was shuttled from one address to another, and horrified to be deported to his native Iran, where they can apostasy punishable by death.

In the past year, Ghanipour found by a retired judge with immigration Faculty of Law at Pepperdine University students who support and desire for asylum.

Ghanipour won the case. But did not know it.

Religious faith in the woman disappeared shortly before the U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, presented a dream in late August.

Pepperdine legal advocates are desperately looking for her husband - it calls on churches in many cases, washing the prison rules, and knocking on doors, where she lived the eleventh hour,

Somewhere in Los Angeles, in their belief, Ghanipour was wandering alone, because it has most of the past decade, and perhaps at the hands of my Bible, and perhaps sleep in homeless shelters or in the bedroom people free.

Police could not find it. In the morgue did not record it. The efforts of his time to find a way relatives, churches, and homeless advocates have been successful.

Ghanipour the disappearance of 49-year-old, who speaks three languages, to attend medical school is particularly difficult for those asylum clinic Pepperdine School of Law.

Dzhilda because you have known, the client first. And provides training lawyers in the early taste of victory. They have only one grainy photo black and white to remind them of thick black hair, her smile proud, on his way stubborn. And they are anxious, knowing that Ghanipour is in poor health.

"Part of me does not want to celebrate until they find her," says Christine Henry, a third year law student.

Ghanipour told the story of his life in a declaration accompanying his application for asylum. In accordance with the pleadings, and spent her childhood in the city of Arak and adolescence in Tehran, about 200 miles to the north. She married in 1979 shortly after graduating from high school and moved with her husband in Germany, to escape from the strict rule of the fundamentalist Islamic revolution.

During his stay in Germany, and studied medicine. They regularly visited relatives in California, and returned briefly to Iran several times to help his father, who will choose his mother. While he was on a tour of historic sites and one of these trips, according to her own statements, was arrested by the Iranian intelligence service and interrogated the suspects, which was the German spy.

The experience left her shaking. Divorced from her husband in Germany, she accepted an invitation to join relatives in California, culminating in June 2000 six-month visa for visitors, she writes in the field of asylum papers.

During his stay with his cousin in Diamond Bar, a meeting that will change your life. Evangelical Christian family knocked on the door. Message of God's love through Christ resonate with Ghanipour, which were not never particularly religious, but he saw what she described as the encounter with God after the death of his mother since his years in Iran.

"I knew immediately in my heart that this is what I was looking for," she writes in a statement on the refuge. He added, "and November November 30, 2000, on a visit to the United States legally, I received Jesus Christ my Savior and became a Christian believer."

The decision to deport his family. "One by one my relatives turned away from me," she writes.

With any family, no job opportunities and to obtain a visa expired, Ghanipour cruise from place to place, relying on the kindness of friends, and many of the churches attended. Her asylum papers listed only 25 titles in the last five years, including locations in Woodland Hills, Glendale, North Hollywood, Sherman Oaks, Inglewood, Hawthorne and Ontario.

"She fears that they will be arrested and removed" from the United States, "said Bruce Einhorn, a retired federal immigration judge, who runs a clinic Pepperdine seekers. "She lives in this plan."

Ghanipour repeatedly trying to resolve the problems of migration. It had applied to extend his visa, but refuses to see him sin, because the drawing had been submitted, and has written documentation for asylum. It happened, she says, because the Sherman Oaks documented, posing as immigration lawyer submitted an outdated form of fraud and money in the process (do not say how much).

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