A five-year-old girl from Los Angeles broke through the security barricades lining a parade route honoring Pope Francis on Wednesday and hand-delivered a message pleading for immigrant rights in the U.S.
Sofi Cruz, a U.S. citizen and daughter of Mexican immigrants, tore her way through the barriers in downtown Washington, D.C., when the pontiff motioned to her from his motorcade. And with a lift from a security guard, Cruz wrapped her arms around the pope, handing him a t-shirt and letter before being whisked away.
Cruz’s parents are among the more than 4 million undocumented immigrants who have lived the last year in a legal limbo, waiting for the courts to make a final determination on President Obama’s executive actions on immigration. Called Deferred Action for Parental Accountability, or DAPA for short, the program would let adults with U.S.-born children and legal permanent residents remain legally in the U.S. for three years.
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On the front of her t-shirt gift for the Pope, Cruz made a simple appeal: “Papa Rescate DAPA” (In English, “Pope Rescue DAPA”).








