On Friday, Rev. Michael Woolf was among 21 people arrested during a protest outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, facility in Broadview, Illinois, outside Chicago.
Video of the arrest shows a group of officers dragging Woolf to the ground and digging their knees into his body before detaining him. Woolf, a pastor at Evanston’s Lake Street Church, was later released after seven hours in custody.
On Sunday, Woolf spoke with the co-hosts of “The Weekend: Primetime” to discuss why he and other faith leaders were protesting outside that facility, as well as the “crisis” of Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown in cities like Chicago.
“We were there to raise our voices against what’s happening in that facility, because we know what’s happening in that facility is pretty much tantamount to torture,” Woolf said. “It’s denial of food, it’s unsanitary conditions, and the people who are detained there are detained without any spiritual care whatsoever.”
Woolf said Friday was not his first day protesting in front of the Broadview facility, which has been criticized for its inhumane conditions.
During previous demonstrations, the pastor said he’s made an effort to speak with officers and remind them that they are “moral actors” who have “choices to make.”
“They’re protecting what amounts to a concentration camp behind them, and they’re allowing it to happen,” he said. “But they have a choice on how they’re going to operate with that.”








