CHICAGO — For as long as she can remember, Martha Armenta felt invisible in the only country she knew as home. She grew up in Little Village, where her parents settled after moving to Chicago from Sinaloa, Mexico, escaping poverty and violence, she said. When she learned in high school she was in the U.S. without legal permission, she acknowledged that the dreams her parents sacrificed for .
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For as long as she can remember, Martha Armenta felt invisible in the only country she knew as home. She grew up in Little Village, where her parents settled after moving to Chicago from Sinaloa, Mexico, escaping poverty and violence, she said. When she learned in high school she was in the U.S. without legal permission, she acknowledged that the dreams her parents sacrificed for were going to .