On a quiet Sunday morning in Springfield, Ohio, the Rev. Reginald Silencieux knelt at the altar of the First Haitian Evangelical Church, the American and Haitian flags standing solemnly behind him. Encircled by ushers and musicians, he bowed his head in prayer, seeking divine protection for his congregation. Outside the church’s walls, uncertainty loomed large. Members of the Haitian community, once vibrant and hopeful, were now gripped by fear as the threat of deportation under President Donald Trump’s immigration policies cast a long shadow.