Last year, I took Nadia to her first Nutcracker, and she was mesmerized with the performance, and was looking forward to this year’s one. This time, we also took Kira; I had somedoubts, especially because the way we got the seats, the girls were in the first row, and I was in the second row right behind them, ready to jump and put Kira on my laps. It was not necessary; although both girls fidgeted in their seats, theyloved the show. A very special Chicago Nutcracker was brilliant as always; I hope they will never change it ๐.
The introductory images with the pictures of the old newspaper articles about immigrant workers were as relevant as they could be!
Th usual pile of presents in the foyer
The official 2025 trailer:
The girls fidgeted the most during the Snowflake dance and during the final dance of the Sculptress, and indeed, if there are any “classic” parts in the Joffrey Nutcracker, these ones are. However, when I later asked them which parts they liked most, both of them mentioned these two. Kira said she wants to be one of these little Snowflakes :).
I especially liked this year’s Sculptress, her final dance was out of this world!
More of Joffrey Ballet Instagram (and you know I can talk about them for hours, so i ‘d rather stop now!)
It’s not easy to get on a Santa Train, because these days, there is only one train instead of two, and it runs on different CTA lines at different times. Igor and I were discussing how we can get the girls on the train, and the only option seems to be to try to get on it after the Nutcracker, which was a little bit tight, even taking into account the usual holiday train delays. But then Igor realized that we could catch it in the opposite direction, when it departs from Howard, and take it to the Nutcracker instead.
The girls were impatient, so we left well in advance, and it turned out to be perfect, because there were picture-taking opportunities and tons of candy canes.
A line for pictures with Santa
Finally, the train doors were open, and we got inside (Igor joined us by then). It was super crowded, so even though we got the seats, it was difficult to see the rest of the car.
The ride took significantly longer than it would be on a regular train, but we still managed to get to the Nutcracker on time!
WBEZ reported earlier this week that the hazardous situation with snow removal in Chicago is not only due to the record early snow, but also because 60% of the landscapers are not leaving their houses, afraid of being deported.
When I shared this news with Boris, he said: Let ICE agents do this! I said: It would be great, but on what grounds? Boris replied: Well, ICE is detaining people whom they call illegal because they believe they are taking jobs from Americans. Since apparently, nobody wants these jobs, ICE agents should be summoned to snow removal!
While this is unlikely to happen, I still think it’s funny enough to share:)
Wednesday was windy like never; Thursday and Friday was super-cold, and on Saturday, it was snowing, setting the record of the most snowiest day in Chicago in November!
Boris and I ventured to the Loop, because I wanted to go to the Art Institute, and do some holiday shopping. It was still cold, it was still very windy, plus, it was snowing!
I found this sweater in one of the boxes when we were installing new shelves in our storage unit. It was hand knitted for me by my grandaunt when I was eighteen, and I decided to try it on. Since it looked not bad at all, I decided to take it out :). I have received complements about it everywhere on that day!That was by our house at 3:30 PM, and it was not it!
Boris and I took turns cleaning our stairs because it was completely unsafe to use them:
By 6 AM, the snow was mostly over, and the cleaning crew came and cleaned it from everywhere, and then the snow started melting. However, it looks like it’s not it, and there will be more cold and more snow during the upcoming week.
I have a list of Chicago’s new restaurants which I want to check out, but I am increasingly rarely have opportunities to do so. One of these places was Bistro Monadnock. I love the building and it’s story, so I was excited to see this new restaurant. Their web side says:
This project is a homecoming for the bistroโs owners – John, Karl & Graeme Fehr. The three brothers previously operated a boutique law firm in the Monadnock Building from 2011 โ 2017. Ditching the courtroom for the dining room, this is their third hospitality concept in 6 years. They considered no other building for this restaurant.
Since Boris is in town (he arrived on Sunday), but I still needed to work from the office (not like I absolutely needed to, but it was easier to organize everything that way, and I had other things to do in the Loop. One of these to-do things was near DePaul campus, so I suggested we go there for dinner.
The menu is all in French, and I knew only a couple of dishes. so I had to Google them to get an idea. After googling, the pictures on the website started to make sense :).
That was Jacques Rose, very nice fruitie and tart cocktailFrisรฉe aux Lardons salad: “potatoes” in this salad are these very thin laced chips:). I was trying to imagine, how warm bacon could pair with greens, but it was really great.Bouillabaisse was one of the few dishes I didn’t need to google:)Beef Bourguignon – I didn’t know that the meet was boneless ribs (it was Boris’ choice after we got instructions from the waiter)They ran out of a dessert I wanted, so we both got profiteroles with pistachio gelato
The 615 detainees are from a list of roughly 1,800 arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the Chicago area between June 11 and Oct. 7, and there could be more to come, Jon Seidel reports for the Chicago Sun-Times.
Itโs not clear how many of the people covered by U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummingsโ order remain in the country. The judge said he doesnโt want anyone released who poses a risk to public safety; heโs giving the Justice Department a chance to identify any such person.
But Cummings said heโs trying to restore the status quo that existed before the Trump administration recently changed its interpretation of immigration law. That policy shift imposed mandatory detention on people across the country who previously would have been given a chance for a bail hearing.
Agents detained many of the people while they were working, including 20 landscapers and four ride-share or taxi drivers. Seven were also arrested at an โimmigration-related hearing,โ Cummings said, and another 11 in public places like a park, gas station or Dunkinโ Donuts drive-thru.
Brothers Sam, 16, left, and Ben Luhmann, 17, patrol the streets of West Chicago and St. Charles for federal agents looking to detain people on Nov. 7, 2025. The two homeschooled high schoolers started patrolling Sept. 15 after federal agents targeted their heavily Latino community. Since then, they have had numerous encounters with federal agents and have been threatened. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
PUBLISHED: November 14, 2025 at 5:00 AM CST | UPDATED: November 14, 2025 at 8:03 AM CST
With a goodbye to their mom, Sam and Ben Luhmann walked out the screen door of their West Chicago home on a recent weekday morning.
A few minutes shy of 7:30 a.m., Ben pulled their midsize sedan out of the garage as Sam stood in the driveway, adjusting the straps around his shoulders and checking his phone.
But the brothers werenโt gunning to beat the first bell at school. They were racing to find ICE.
At 16 and 17 years old, Sam and Ben for the past two months have made it their mission to follow, investigate and capture federal immigration activity across the Chicago area. Itโs an undertaking the brothers say happened naturally after growing up in a household where social justice and civic duty were as much a part of their homeschool curriculum as math and science.
โIf I get the opportunity to fight like this for the rest of my life, I would be totally OK with that,โ Ben said.
Their efforts in the vast resistance movement against the Trump administrationโs mass deportation operation in Chicago, represent the wave of youth activists who have been galvanized into action by Midway Operation Blitz, following a long tradition paved around the world by young activists, experts say. From Students of a Democratic Society protesting the Vietnam War to todayโs Malala Yousafzai and Greta Thunberg, the sense of injustice draws young people to act.
โWe know in these moments โฆ where there is deep distrust toward political institutions โ where individuals and particularly young people are feeling quite dissatisfied with both political parties โ that young people actually do engage in politics quite passionately,โ said Matthew Nelsen, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Miami who also works as a research consultant for the University of Chicagoโs GenForward Survey.
Earlier this month, students at New Trier High School in Winnetka who regularly volunteer with refugees and migrants in Chicago spoke out that the school is curtailing their volunteer efforts because of the blitz. In October, hundreds of Little Village students staged a walkout in protest of the crackdown. And on Mexican Independence Day in September, students from all across Chicago Public Schools organized a rally in front of Trump Tower to denounce the raids, their cheers of โViva la Razaโ and โViva Mexicoโ echoing through skyscrapers down East Wacker Drive.
โ(The youth) hold a lot of power to shift the direction of the country and how itโs working,โ said Kate Rice, 52, a Rogers Park-based rapid responder, who has witnessed a number of younger people spring into action. โItโs time for them to take control, especially Generation Alpha. Theyโre young, theyโre motivated, theyโre angry โฆ and I think this is the perfect time for them to start getting politically active.โ
โJust the horror of it, I wanted to be able to fight it so bad,โ he told the Tribune on a recent morning patrol. Sam sat in the passenger seat with a body camera strapped to his chest, his eyes glued to his phone for any reports of activity nearby.
His parents, both Wheaton College grads, have raised him and his seven younger siblings to see the humanity in everyone, Ben said. But from more than 2,000 miles away, he wasnโt sure what he could do. Then the blitz came to his hometown.
Sam Luhmann videotapes the vehicle of federal agents outside of the Kane County Judicial Center on Nov. 7, 2025, in St. Charles. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
On Sept. 15, Ben and Samโs mom, Audrey Luhmann, got a text from a friend calling for someone to check reports of federal activity in West Chicago. Though sheโd never received nor heeded that kind of request before, Luhmannโs gut reaction was that this is what sheโs supposed to do, she recalled in an interview earlier this month. So she and her eight kids, even her 3-year-old, piled into their white passenger van.
By the time they arrived, activity had long passed. But that day introduced the family to other rapid responders. Within 48 hours, Ben and Sam encountered their first attempted federal immigration arrest in real time.
โI could finally do something,โ Ben said.
Since the raids hit home, Ben and Sam, who have been homeschooled their whole lives, have balanced college applications and schoolwork with patrols. Theyโve documented immigration enforcement from Carpentersville to Little Village. Theyโve gone toe-to-toe with federal agents, asking officers questions and checking to make sure theyโre abiding by court orders. And theyโve started to compile a list of plates on federal vehicles that appeared altered.
Every day is different. Last week, the pair spent a weekday morning primarily just monitoring usual hotspots and letting fellow rapid responders know areas were clear. But by the next day, they were going door-to-door speaking with neighbors about landscapers who had been detained in St. Charles and videotaping federal agents detain a man just outside the Kane County Judicial Center.
Nelsen, the University of Miami professor, said he thinks the uptick in youth political activism in Chicago is indicative of how younger residents are feeling about the current administrationโs policies. Young people are also often drawn to extra-systemic forms of political action when theyโre feeling cynical about their political institutions, Nelsen said.
โIf theyโre not feeling trusting of the government, they may be moved to take political action in realms that they feel are beyond the state,โ he said.
Citlalli Santiago, 23, is a graduate student at the University of Illinois Chicago who became part of her local rapid response group after the presidential election. She said the raids have taken a toll on her own family but that moments like this illuminate the importance of a community banding together, to stepping in where government falls short. And sheโs encouraged, she added, that younger voices are among those rising to the occasion because itโs a sign that progress is possible.
โIโm really proud of my peers (and the) people even younger than me because weโve stepped up,โ said Santiago, who recently moved to Pilsen but was born and raised in West Chicago. โI do think that things need to change, and if itโs younger people driving it, then I see more of a hope for the future.โ
This week, the Tribune reported that after two months, the surge of federal immigration agents that descended on the city and its suburbs as part of President Donald Trumpโs Operation Midway Blitz may soon leave as the controversial mission winds down, per multiple law enforcement sources. That doesnโt mean the enhanced immigration enforcement will end anytime soon, with sources saying the feds planned to leave in place a still-to-be-determined force of immigration agents.
And as long as that effort persists, even if and when their days of daily patrolling subside, the brothers will too, they say.
Sam Luhmann, 16, left, and his brother Ben,17, second from left, videotape federal agents detaining a man outside of the Kane County Judicial Center on Nov. 7, 2025, in St. Charles. While on patrol, they encountered the vehicles of four landscapers who had been detained earlier that morning as well as documented a man being detained outside of the Kane County Judicial Center after appearing for a routine court hearing. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
When the brothers first began, they thought theyโd be patrolling for a week and a half, maybe two. But as operations stretched on, theyโve grown accustomed to being prepared for anything, to watching and waiting.
โItโs been weird getting home, from filming federal agents and being threatened to be arrested by them, and then having to work on college applications,โ Ben said.
Ben, a senior this year, wants to go to the Berklee College of Music in Boston. Ben likes to write and produce songs, and heโd like to make a career out of it someday. Sam, a sophomore, prefers to spend his free time outside, whether thatโs fishing or going for a bike ride.
But because of the patrols, the brothers have started to learn more about politics, law and policy, so that while they monitor, they know not just what theyโre looking for, but why.
Lately, Ben has been delving into Jose Antonio Vargasโ โDear America: Notes of An Undocumented Citizen.โ He was assigned the book by his mom, as part of his homeschool studies.
Homeschooling all but one of her eight children, Audrey Luhmann has always tried to imbue a social justice lens in her lessons.
โLetโs study the forgotten voices, you know,โ Luhmann, 40, told the Tribune on a recent afternoon after her sons returned home from another patrol. Around her, the remnants of previous lessons painted her houseโs walls, from completed coloring pages of moments in history to a map of ancient Mesopotamia.
Schooling aside, Luhmann herself is no stranger to advocacy. For the past four years, sheโs been an activist in the church space. Sheโs also been resisting in her own right alongside Ben and Sam, helping deliver Halloween candy last month to two west suburban apartment complexes hit by immigration enforcement.
At night, she and her husband, a geology professor at Wheaton College, have been sitting down with their oldest kids to digest the dayโs events.
And while her own aptitude for activism doesnโt keep her from worrying about Ben and Sam as they patrol (โIโm still a mom,โ Luhmann noted), she knows the pull that has kept her sons on the front lines.
Last month, Ben and Sam were out monitoring a convoy of federal vehicles in Elgin when agents circled their car and pulled the brothers over. Pounding on their windows, the agents demanded the brothers get out.
โIโve never seen a window shake like that,โ Sam recalled. Sam had been recording the confrontation but when he opened his window, an agent took his phone and then pushed him against the car with his arms behind his back, he said. The agents threatened to arrest them for obstructing their investigations and endangering other drivers on the road.
But Ben, going on more than a year and half since he passed his driverโs test on the first try, maintained they always abide by the law and try to track federal activity from a distance.
Eventually, the agents let the brothers go with a warning.
For a while afterward, Ben and Sam just sat in their car, processing. They meant to head straight home, but then more reported activity started to come through. They decided to carry on.
Thatโs a through line for the brothers. Should the blitz subside, Ben and Sam say they plan to redirect their efforts to supporting those affected by operations full time.
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โ(I think) this really changes my perspective,โ Ben said, โfor the rest of my life.โ
ICE is going away from Chicago! They didn’t like our winter rehearsal :), and now they want to return in March. Well, we can absolutely create a snowstorm in March!
I had a very disturbing conversation at work. One of my co-workers told us about his “buddy” who joined ICE. He was like “I just told him: don’t you dare to touch the kids,” but it didn’t seem like he was horrified with this confession. The rest of us were more disturbed, especially having two Latino co-workers present.
That first co-worker who mentioned his friend joining ICE, told us, that according to his friend, the pay was good, and he was getting three times more than otherwise (and if I recall correctly our earlier conversations, “otherwise” was police). So we are talking about three times of police pay, and also, they were getting 1.5K for each person arrested! No wonder they were snatching people off the streets! I went ahead with a speach about moral values, and others were like “how can he sleep at night?”
My Venesuelan co-worker, who voted for Trump, now uses each opportunity to tell me how much she regret it, and how instead of sending criminals out of the country, Trump is now detaining hard working good people, and my other co-workers do not even try to say something in opposition.
The Judge ordered to release most of people who were seized by ICE in Chicago.
And today was the first time in two months, that I saw a woman with a little girl tighed to her back, walking with a box of candies through the CTA car.
I didn’t know that Judge Sara Ellis recited Carl Sandburgโs “Chicago” poem at the court last week! That is so… beautiful!
Copying the article from the WBEZ website:
Carl Sandburgโs โChicagoโ poem finds fresh relevance in a city occupied by ICE
Known for praising the city with โbig shoulders,โ the beloved 1914 composition recently was recited in a ruling addressing federal immigration agentsโ use of force. Literary scholars say they were โastoundedโ and โamazed.โ
A judgeโs decision to read a 111-year-old poem in court before curbing federal agentsโ use of force in Chicago has brought fresh relevance to an iconic piece of local literature.
In a ruling addressing actions by federal immigration agents, U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis last week recited Carl Sandburgโs 1914 composition โChicago,โ known for praising the townโs working-class roots and coining the โCity of the Big Shouldersโ moniker.
Literary scholars marveled at Ellisโ decision to read the piece in its entirety.
โI was both astounded and mesmerized,โ said Ivy Wilson, a Board of Visitors professor of English and American studies at Northwestern University.
Paris Review Poetry Editor Srikanth โChicuโ Reddy said he was โamazed.โ
โTo read a poem as part of a justification or a rationale for a judgment of this importance shows how art can express the complexities of what weโre living through in ways that maybe other forms of speech canโt,โ said Reddy, also a professor of English and creative writing at the University of Chicago.
Ellisโ order placed further restrictions on the agentsโ use of โriot control weaponsโ and certain restraint techniques against protesters and observers amid the Trump administrationโs deportation campaign in Chicago.
Her inclusion of the poem struck a chord with locals, who have long regarded the work as an unofficial city anthem. The piece has been taught in classrooms, performed at poetry slams and recited by politicians, including former Mayor Rahm Emanuel. It has inspired a โBig Shouldersโ comic series, and it is even painted on the facade of Damen Tavern in West Town.
But the poem is finding new resonance during the sustained U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement campaign in Chicago.
Ellis appeared to take inspiration from the pieceโs interrogation of outsidersโ perceptions of Chicago. For example, Sandburg considers descriptions of the city as โwickedโ and โcrookedโ alongside his view of the town as a place โwith lifted head singing so proud to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning.โ
โThis is a vibrant place, brimming with vitality and hope, striving to move forward from its complicated history,โ Ellis said, juxtaposing her vision with the Trump administrationโs portrayal, which she described as a city โin a vice hold of violence, ransacked by rioters and attacked by agitators.โ
Reddy said Ellisโ comments were a fitting addendum to the piece.
โThe poem reflects the complex messiness and energy and contradictions of Chicago,โ he said. โAnd I think what the judge was saying was, this is a city, like any great American city, that has problems and a dynamic population that is debating and thinking and struggling to work through those problems. And at the same time, there are things we will resist in order to remain true to our values and our diversity.โ
Born in Galesburg, Sandburg went on to become an influential poet, journalist and biographer. When the Pulitzer Prize winner moved to Chicago, he observed an economy driven by industrial workers. He then venerated the โhog butcher,โ โtool makerโ and โplayer with railroadsโ in the opening lines of โChicago.โ
While that first stanza is widely popular, Wilson said he is more drawn to Sandburgโs line about the city โbuilding, breaking, rebuilding.โ He interprets it as the ethos of working-class Americans, including those who came to the country both willingly and through forced labor.
โThat notion is really the heart of not just how Sandburg is thinking about Chicago, but really the best of what we would call an American sensibility,โ Wilson said. โAnd that American sensibility is not nativist, but itโs really built from the backs of immigrants, all of us as immigrants.โ
Donald G. Evans, executive director of the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame, also described the poem as relevant to the current moment. He said Sandburg was known for his โcompassion and humanity.โ
โWhat we aspire to in the cultural community is to be like Carl Sandburg was: a person who believed in the people, and believed that everybody โ from the bottom up โ should have the same kind of respect and the same kind of support,โ said Evans, who inducted Sandburg into the hall of fame in 2011.
โAnd that we should help all of our neighbors.โ
The poem
Hog Butcher for the World,
Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat,
Player with Railroads and the Nation’s Freight Handler;
Stormy, husky, brawling,
City of the Big Shoulders:
They tell me you are wicked and I believe them, for I have seen your painted women under the gas lamps luring the farm boys.
And they tell me you are crooked and I answer: Yes, it is true I have seen the gunman kill and go free to kill again.
And they tell me you are brutal and my reply is: On the faces of women and children I have seen the marks of wanton hunger.
And having answered so I turn once more to those who sneer at this my city, and I give them back the sneer and say to them:
Come and show me another city with lifted head singing so proud to be alive and coarse and strong and cunning.
Flinging magnetic curses amid the toil of piling job on job, here is a tall bold slugger set vivid against the little soft cities;
Fierce as a dog with tongue lapping for action, cunning as a savage pitted against the wilderness,
Bareheaded,
Shoveling,
Wrecking,
Planning,
Building, breaking, rebuilding,
Under the smoke, dust all over his mouth, laughing with white teeth,
Under the terrible burden of destiny laughing as a young man laughs,
Laughing even as an ignorant fighter laughs who has never lost a battle,
Bragging and laughing that under his wrist is the pulse, and under his ribs the heart of the people,
Laughing!
Laughing the stormy, husky, brawling laughter of Youth, half-naked, sweating, proud to be Hog Butcher, Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with Railroads and Freight Handler to the Nation.
The first thing I noticed when I returned to Chicago was that helicopters were gone! No more dreadful sounds day and night. Gone!
I might speculate that the government shutdown limited funds for helicopter raids, but I prefer to think that ICE simply does not have the time for that, as it is trying to defend itself in multiple lawsuits.
OMG, how much I love the people of my city! I worried when I observed the initial silence as a response to the Trump administration’s actions. It seemed like everyone was paralyzed by fear. I am so happy to see that everyone remembered that there is power in numbers, and 200,000 people can’t be put into custody. And I love that our governor is keeping his promise to fight Trump in court.
Just a couple of today’s examples: an ICE agent charged with drunk driving. I copied the whole article from Tribune, and note this part:
The Trump administration repeatedly has referred to drunken driving as a justifiable reason for non-citizens to be detained and deported
An Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent is facing drunken driving charges after police said his car jumped a curb and crashed into a hedgerow in the west suburbs.
Guillermo Diaz-Torres, 33, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, will be arraigned next month in DuPage County following a one-car crash in Oak Brook on Oct. 26. Police allege he failed several field-sobriety tests, including balancing, walking in a straight line and reciting the alphabet.
If convicted, Diaz-Torres could face penalties ranging from probation to up to a year in jail. Throughout its immigration crackdown, the Trump administration repeatedly has referred to drunken driving as a justifiable reason for non-citizens to be detained and deported.
Operation Midway Blitz โ the U.S. Department of Homeland Securityโs mass deportation effort in the Chicago area โ was launched in honor of a young suburban woman who was killed by a man accused of driving drunk while being in the country without the legal paperwork.
According to police video obtained by the Tribune, Diaz-Torres told officers he had just finished working an 18-hour shift at the ICE holding facility in Broadview and was heading straight to his hotel in Lombard. Though it was nearly 2 a.m., and Broadview is less than 10 miles away, Diaz-Torres couldnโt account for his whereabouts during the roughly 90-minute period after his shift ended and said he didnโt know which direction he had traveled after work.
โI have no idea, sir,โ he tells police on the video. โIโm not from here.โ
One more:
A federal judge in Chicago today issued a sweeping injunction that puts more permanent restrictions on the use of force by immigration agents during โOperation Midway Blitz,โ saying top government officials lied in their testimony about threats that protesters posed and that their unlawful behavior on the streets โshows no signs of stopping.โ
โI find the governmentโs evidence to be simply not credible,โ U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis said in an oral ruling from the bench, describing a litany of incidents over the past month and a half where citizens were tear-gassed โindiscriminately,โ beaten and tackled by agents and struck in the face with pepper spray balls.
Also:
The Chicago Tribune and Chicago Public Media petitioned U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis to release the recordings, which were filed under seal as part of a lawsuit led by the Chicago Headline Club, a nonprofit journalism advocacy organization, and a consortium of other media groups. The journalism organizations allege federal immigration enforcement officials have systematically violated the constitutional rights of protesters and reporters during Trumpโs mass deportation mission, which began in early September and shows no sign of slowing down.
I watched some of them! Thinking about whether to save them here for historical records! Let’s do just one for now: