(RNS) — In video recorded on Friday (Nov. 4) outside the embattled U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois, the Rev. Michael Woolf stands alongside fellow protesters, fiddling awkwardly with his backpack as faith leaders and other protesters chant slogans at a line of police officers. A moment later, one officer can be seen walking forward, grabbing Woolf by the wrist and yanking.
Demonstrators attempted to hold on to Woolf, who was a clerical collar, but four officers wrenched him from the crowd and tossed him to the ground. After turning him onto his stomach, officers proceeded to arrest Woolf, and removed him to the Cook County Sheriff’s Office in Maywood, Illinois.
“I’ve got bruises all over my body,” Woolf, an American Baptist minister who is pastor of Lake Street Church of Evanston, Illinois, told Religion News Service. He was speaking in his first interview since being released Friday afternoon after about seven hours in custody.
Woolf said when he asked the arresting officers to loosen the plastic handcuffs that were causing his hands to go numb, an officer replied: “Nobody wants to talk to you — shut the f–k up.”
“It’s part of the dehumanizing nature of it, and it’s it gives me a lot of clarity around what’s happening here,” said Woolf, who has been active in protests against ICE. “It’s really a spiritual emergency.”
Footage and images of Woolf’s arrest were shared widely on the internet on Friday, drawing attention to the demonstration at the ICE facility, where protests have become commonplace in recent weeks. Organizers said at least 100 faith leaders of various faiths and denominations came to the Broadview facility, providing a climax to religious pushback to “Operation Midway Blitz,” a mass deportation effort that has rounded up hundreds of undocumented immigrants and other Chicago residents since it was launched in September. Recent reports say that many immigration agents who have been operating in the city, particularly U.S. Border Patrol officers, are being transferred to Charlotte, North Carolina.
Cook County Police said 21 people were arrested at the demonstration, all but one of whom were charged with “Obstruction/Disorderly Conduct/Pedestrian Walking on Highways.” Participants said at least seven of those arrested were faith leaders from Presbyterian, Lutheran, Baptist, Unitarian Universalist, and Jewish traditions.
The Department of Homeland Security did not reply immediately to a request for comment, but on Friday a post on the department’s X feed seemed to mock the protest participants, saying, “Womp womp, cry all you want. These criminal illegal aliens aren’t getting released,” the post read.
The post called the demonstrators “violent rioters” and “imbecilic morons” who need to “get a job.”
Asked about the DHS statement, Woolf said he and other protesters were “demanding constitutional and due process rights” for detainees, adding, “I believe that justice will come in this life or the next.”
“I know which side I choose. I choose the gospel,” he added.
“This is our job,” said the Rev. Kristina Sinks, a United Methodist pastor who helped organize a worship service, in reply to the DHS post. Sinks also rejected the suggestion that demonstrators were violent. She later explained via text message that she believes it is the job of clergy to “advocate for the oppressed, the vulnerable, and those dehumanized by any forces of evil and oppression.”
Sinks added: “Why does DHS feel threatened by clergy praying? What are they hiding?”
Organizers called the protest one of the largest in a series of demonstrations at the Broadview site, many of which have been led by religious leaders, who that federal authorities are mistreating the detainees at the facility. The treatment of the detainees is the subject of an ongoing class-action lawsuit.
Sinks said faith leaders began Friday with a multi-faith service outside the Broadview facility to “bear witness to the suffering inside the facility.” The participants held daily hygiene products, bread, and clean water to “symbolize needs not met” by the government agents who run the facility.
Faith leaders from various traditions — Christian, Jewish, Hindu and others — then presented police with a letter from clergy offering spiritual care to the detainees. Organizers, Sinks said, sent DHS an identical letter a week before.
Offers of pastoral care and Communion for detainees at the facility have been offered multiple times, only to be rebuffed, as they were on Friday. Religious leaders have raised the issue as a religious freedom concern, with U.S. Catholic bishops, backed by comments by Pope Leo XIV, condemning authorities for depriving detainees of sacraments — something some religious leaders have been allowed to do in the past.
After clergy were denied access again on Friday, video footage from the protest posted on social media showed Woolf and other faith leaders attempting to approach the facility, marching arm-in-arm. The demonstrators were quickly mobbed by police, who began pushing them back. A short time later, police began arresting demonstrators.
Several faith leaders at the demonstration expressed shock at the intensity of the police response. The Rev. Quincy Worthington, a Presbyterian Church (USA) minister who has been active in protests against ICE and was in the crowd on Friday, said he tried to help up people who had fallen or pushed down who were “being crushed or beaten.”
Similarly, the Rev. Hannah Kardon, a United Methodist minister who had thrown to the ground and arrested at a previous demonstration in Broadview, said in a text message that she saw “overwhelming and unnecessary violence” from “multiple police forces” at the facility.
“I saw knees on necks,” she wrote. “I saw people pulled and dragged. I saw people slammed to the ground. Faith leaders were brutalized today for wanting to offer spiritual care to their stolen neighbors. It was horrific.”
Clergy have been vocal critics of “Operation Midway Blitz” since it began and said they have been repeatedly been met with force by federal, state and local police forces. At least five local clergy, including Woolf, Kardon and Worthington, say they have been shot with pepper balls fired by Department of Homeland Security forces. Footage of agents shooting the Rev. David Black, a Presbyterian minister from Chicago, in the head with pepper balls was widely shared on social media.
As state and local police have become the main force guarding the facility in recent weeks, activists have accused Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, a critic of Trump and his mass deportation policies, of protecting ICE agents.
The treatment of faith-based protesters is part of the class-action lawsuit as well as a separate case that includes Black as a plaintiff. The latter case resulted in a temporary restraining order limiting federal agents’ ability to use violence against protesters, including “religious practitioners.”
Woolf said that after he was arrested, he and other participants continued to pray and worship during the hours they were detained together. They sang songs such as “We Shall Overcome,” and some even recited poetry.
The pastor added he has been reflecting on “the dehumanizing nature” of his experience, but that “the cruelty that goes on that facility … must be 100 times worse.”