Kenyan Man Chooses Self-Deportation After Years in the US
Kenyan Man Chooses Self-Deportation After Years in the US

After 16 years of building a life in the United States, Samuel Kangethe has made a heart-wrenching decision โ€” to leave the only home heโ€™s known in adulthood and return to Kenya, alone.

His choice to self-deport means walking away from his American wife, Latavia, and their three U.S.-born children โ€” not because he wants to, but because the immigration system left him with no other viable path.

I need to take the option of self-deporting myself,โ€ Kangethe says, the words landing heavy. โ€œI donโ€™t want to be taken away in shackles. I want to leave on my own terms.

Itโ€™s a decision made after countless late-night conversations with his wife, Latavia Kangethe. A decision thatโ€™s left their family raw. For months, they weighed every possible option, hoping for a last-minute breakthrough โ€” a legal loophole, a change in policy, a miracle. But none came.

Kangethe first arrived in the U.S. on a student visa and spent the next 16 years working hard, paying taxes, raising a family, and becoming part of his local community. But like millions of undocumented immigrants in the U.S., he lived in a constant state of uncertainty. Despite being a husband and father to U.S. citizens, there was no clear path to legal residency.

โ€œThis was never about escaping Kenya,โ€ he says. โ€œIt was about creating a life with my family, giving my children stability and opportunity.โ€

Now, that life is being ripped apart.

Latavia will remain in the U.S. with their children. Overnight, she becomes a single mother, trying to hold together a household that has lost its anchor. โ€œThis has broken us in ways I canโ€™t explain,โ€ she said softly. โ€œWe tried everything. We hoped. But hope isnโ€™t always enough.โ€

Kangetheโ€™s return to Kenya means starting from scratch. With no job lined up and few resources, heโ€™s facing an uncertain future. Still, he holds on to one thing: control over how he leaves. โ€œIโ€™d rather walk out with dignity than be dragged out in handcuffs,โ€ he says. โ€œMy children deserve to remember their father standing tall.โ€

The story has resonated deeply across immigrant communities, where many live with similar fears. It underscores the quiet pain experienced by families who live in legal limbo โ€” contributing, sacrificing, and loving, only to be told they donโ€™t belong.

Samuel Kangetheโ€™s departure isnโ€™t just a relocation. Itโ€™s a separation. A fracture. A forced goodbye between a father and his children, a husband and his wife. One more name added to the growing list of lives shaped โ€” and often shattered โ€” by a system with few answers.


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