This summer, the world watched harrowing scenes of desperate families trying to get out of Afghanistan before the government fell to the Taliban. In the Charlottesville area, just as elsewhere across the United States, residents with family ties to the country are still doing everything they can to rescue loved ones from the repressive regime.
Students at the University of Virginia School of Law are helping local Afghan families who hold special immigrant visas to fill out paperwork they hope will reunite them with their loved ones.
“A birthday in 1997 means they are as old as I am,” said first-year law student Daniel Elliott, regarding one of the imperiled people on whose behalf he’s been working. “The people you’re filling out this paperwork for are not just information on a page.”
Special immigrant visa holders typically are here because they helped the U.S. in some capacity, such as by providing translation services. They are eligible to seek “humanitarian parole” for stranded family members, a process with which students have been assisting since late September. The parole gives family members permission to enter the United States.
Making the case for the government’s help requires exacting detail and a strong argument on paper, which is where law students come in. How much is the person at risk? Will they have financial support from family if they come here? The students then pass the application on to a licensed immigration attorney for final processing.
Elliott was among the four students in the pro bono effort’s “first wave,” as the effort’s organizers are calling it, which occurred shortly after the end of U.S. military operations in Afghanistan.

