For teenager George Lusolo, football felt familiar in a country that was not.
Now 19, he arrived in the US from the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2018 seeking asylum alongside his mother.
"I really didn't know the language. I didn't know the people," he told BBC Sport Africa.
"I was still a kid so everything was really difficult for me and my mom."
After time in detention in Texas and then a shelter in New York, George eventually settled in Portland.
While his asylum claim was successfully processed, he saw posts about a game of football on social media.
"What was really exciting to me was there's people like me playing in this field," the teenager said.
"I came here, I played, it was really fun.
"Soccer is my therapy. I've always played since I was a kid in Kinshasa.
"When you're playing with people that are from the same place from you, from the same struggle, it really feels really nice."
What began as an informal gathering on the asphalt in Kennedy Park in 2021 has grown into a community where people from dozens of countries share a love of the beautiful game.
According to Deji Kuribanza, another Congolese immigrant who arrived in the US via Angola, they find their feet through the universal language of football.
"Everybody does not need to speak in one language," the 18-year-old said.
"Just point to your feet [or] some part in your body and ask for the ball. It's a really cool thing."
Last year the immigrant communities across Maine were shaken by raids carried out by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The Migration Policy Institute, an independent, non-partisan organisation that seeks to improve immigration and integration policies, estimates that at least 400,000 people have been arrested by ICE since January 2025.
The US government says those targeted pose a threat to public safety and national security, while the Department of Homeland Security - which runs ICE - told the BBC that people who are in the country legally have "nothing to worry about".
However, rights groups argue the crackdown has swept up innocent people who pose no risk to society.
That was the case at Kennedy Park.
"Players and their families were too afraid to leave their homes because of the danger that ICE created for them," said Anthony Fiori, who coordinates the pick-up games.
"Students missed a couple weeks of school because of it.
"ICE created a lot of fear. They were doing a lot of harm here to the community."
But the football community stepped in, organising over 70 grocery deliveries to those who did not want to venture out at the height of the raids.
Kennedy Park also led the campaign to free 17-year-old Joel Andre, a participant in the pick-up games, and his family from detention.




