"My children cry all night long - this is the first time in my life that my oldest children cursing, saying bad things about everything here, and Americans not raise their children to be like that," said Pangemanan.
[Ads /]
Pangemanan has been staying at The Reformed Church of Highland Park since Thursday after ICE agents tried to intercept him while dropping his daughter off at school. A 47-year-old construction worker who helped rebuild Superstorm Sandy homes, he has no criminal history.
Reverend Seth Kaper-Dale considered at first the possibility that this was just an isolated incident, until Arthur Jemmy's home was similarly targeted by thieves. Jemmy has also been staying at the church for months fearing deportation.
[Ads /]
"We would actually call on the attorney general to maybe explore this as a hate crime - the proximity of this event to people moving into sanctuary is deeply disturbing," said Reverend Kaper-Dale.
Reverend Kaper-Dale added someone also recently scribbled an anti-immigration message on one of the church's bathroom walls, but he and his congregation are determined to remain steadfast and hopeful in the face of adversity.
"We just can't keep having debates about a wall, or a certain population of DACA or a this or a that - all these things are interconnected, our lives are interconnected, we better start thinking quickly about what human rights really mean," added the reverend.
As police continue to investigate these break-ins, and the messages inside the church's bathroom, Governor Murphy's staff has offered additional security for Sunday's services.
----------
* More New Jersey news
* Send us a news tip
* Download the abc7NY app for breaking news alerts