The Lost Immigrant Child is a gripping, emotional drama based on true events. In 1987, a Haitian family living in the Bahamian shantytown of Pigeon Peas is torn apart when a brutal late-night immigration raid sweeps through their community. Pierre-François Joseph, his wife Degrace, and their young son Loti flee into the forest to escape deportation. But in the chaos, Pierre is captured, Degrace is shackled, and little Loti is forced to run alone into the night. As Pierre and Degrace struggle against corruption, betrayal, and despair inside the detention system, Loti must summon all his courage to survive in the wilderness—haunted by hunger, storms, and his own fears—while being mysteriously aided by an unseen presence. Their parallel journeys, one of endurance behind bars and one of innocence in the wild, drive toward an emotional reunion that reveals both the cruelty and resilience at the heart of the immigrant experience. With unflinching realism and mythic undertones, The Lost Immigrant Child captures a forgotten chapter of Caribbean history, asking what it means to fight for family, dignity, and the hope of freedom when the world conspires to take it away.