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US IMMIGRATION: AFTER ARREST OF PROTECTED IMMIGRANT, SANCTUARY CHURCH MEMBERS CRY OUT FOR JUSTICE

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YONAT SHIMRON, writing for Religion News Service, reports on protests in the wake of the arrest of an undocumented migrant, Samuel Oliver-Bruno, who had spent almost a year in church “sanctuary”…

Durham, North Carolina, US
Religion News Service

Two days after government agents had forcibly detained Samuel Oliver-Bruno, an undocumented immigrant who had taken sanctuary at the CityWell Church, congregants stood up one after another at a Sunday service to cry out in protest.

“We have suffered the betrayal of our government,” said one member of the church.

“The fabric of our community has been violated,” said another.

“Evil is no longer rhetorical,” said a third. “It’s corporal. It’s real.”

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Cleve May, left, pastor of CityWell Church, flanked by Samuel Oliver’s wife and son with Rev William Barber II, right, at a protest outside the Wake County Detention Center in Raleigh, North Carolina, on 26th November, 2018. PICTURE: Yonat Shimron/RNS

For this multicultural United Methodist Church in a mixed-race pocket of Durham, Oliver-Bruno’s arrest as he appeared for fingerprinting at an office of the US Citizenship and Immigration Services agency has opened a wound. For nearly a year the congregation has allowed Oliver-Bruno, 47, to live in the church’s basement.

The Mexican native, a husband and father who had been working in construction in Greenville, North Carolina, took refuge at CityWell in December, 2017, to avoid a deportation order. In the space of 11 months he became a much-loved member of the congregation, preaching on at least one occasion and teaching the band to perform praise songs in Spanish.

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Samuel Oliver-Bruno with his wife, Julia Perez, in February 2018. PICTURE: Anna Carson DeWitt

After taking him in, the congregation, a seven-year-old startup with a burgeoning membership of young families with children, joined the North Carolina Sanctuary Coalition to advocate against immigration policies that tear families apart. The coalition includes a handful of other churches across the state that have taken in undocumented immigrants facing immediate threat of deportation. There are 52 people across the country taking sanctuary mostly in churches, according to Church World Service. That includes 11 children.

On Monday, hundreds of protesters gathered at the Wake County Detention Center in Raleigh to demand that ICE release Oliver-Bruno. Rev William Barber II, the anti-poverty activist, and civil rights leader, announced that as of 6:15am Oliver-Bruno had been moved to a detention facility in Georgia.

“This snatching of families has a deep and long and evil history and we will call it out for what it is,” Barber thundered. “It’s evil.”

On the Friday after Thanksgiving (23rd November), two dozen church members accompanied Oliver-Bruno on the 15 mile drive to the US Citizenship and Immigration Services office in Morrisville, where he expected to be fingerprinted as part of an application for a deferral of his deportation to Mexico on humanitarian grounds. His wife, Julia Perez, suffers from lupus and a heart condition and he is the family’s only breadwinner capable of paying for her medical care.

Oliver-Bruno, who has been living in the US for more than two decades, decided to submit to the fingerprinting on the advice of his pro bono lawyers at a Duke University law clinic and another nonprofit dedicated to helping undocumented immigrants.

By leaving the church grounds, he knew he was taking a risk. Churches – along with schools and hospitals – are considered “sensitive locations” where federal immigration enforcement officers are unlikely to arrest, search or interview people under most circumstances.

But he figured this was his last best chance.

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Leaders at the CityWell Church pray for Daniel, centre, son of Samuel Oliver-Bruno. PICTURE: Yonat Shimron

At 7:45am on Friday, Oliver-Bruno, his 19-year-old son, Daniel, and several of the church’s pastors and congregants got into cars for the drive to the immigration office. There they were met by more than 40 other church members and friends.

A handful walked into the building with Oliver-Bruno, where he was given papers to fill out. When he finished, he walked over to the processing line, said Cleve May, a pastor of the church who accompanied him.

Seconds later, four plainclothes ICE officers tackled Oliver-Bruno and his son to the ground, May said. After releasing his son, they then whisked Oliver-Bruno down the corridor and out to a van waiting in the rear of the building.

For two hours church members and friends surrounded the van, chanting prayers and singing songs, preventing the driver from backing out. After police arrested 27 people, the van drove off with Oliver-Bruno to the Wake County Detention Center in Raleigh.

US Representatives David Price and GK Butterfield, who represent parts of Durham, quickly sent a letter to USCIS requesting deferred action from deportation.

“At best, Mr Oliver-Bruno was presented with a catch-22 dilemma. At worst, he was entrapped,” the two congressmen, both Democrats, said in a statement.

Church leaders who witnessed the events said the same. “I cannot see how the biometric test was not actually bait for Samuel,” said May, pastor of CityWell, and one of those arrested on charges of failure to disperse and resisting a public officer.

“The hardest question for us as a nation is here,” said May. “Do we really want to be a people with a government that can lure us into a legal process and when we comply with the legal process use Gestapo sting tactics to detain us? Is that who we want to be as a nation?”

Asked why he was arrested, ICE spokesman Bryan D Cox wrote in an email, “Mr Oliver-Bruno is a convicted criminal who has received all appropriate legal process under federal law, has no outstanding appeals, and has no legal basis to remain in the US.”

Cox referred to Oliver-Bruno’s re-entry to the US in 2014 when he used what ICE said were “fraudulent identity documents”. He had gone back to Mexico briefly to visit his ailing parents.

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Samuel Oliver-Bruno, right, with his son, Daniel Oliver Perez, in February, 2018. PICTURE: Anna Carson DeWitt

On Saturday night hundreds of people, including the mayor and a city councilman, attended a church vigil of lament and prayer.

Oliver-Bruno’s wife broke into tears as she stepped forward to address the crowd. Her son, a first-year student at Pitt Community College near Greenville, North Carolina, added that despite the terror of his father’s arrest, he felt God’s protection.

“God told me, ‘Do not be afraid. I will protect your father as God protected Daniel from the mouth of the lion,’” Daniel Oliver Perez said.

Congregants then read aloud The Immigrants’ Creed, which begins, “I believe in Almighty God, who guided the people in exile and in exodus.”

But it was at Sunday’s two-hour service that members were encouraged to express their feelings. Many said they felt indignation about a government immigration system they said was broken.

“They maliciously laid a trap for him, and I’m pretty mad about it,” said Deb Fletcher, a member.

They remembered Oliver-Bruno as a man of deep faith who had worked toward a certificate from Duke Divinity School’s Hispanic-Latino/a Preaching Initiative while in sanctuary, and they lamented his empty chair.

“God has bound us in joy for so long,” said Corey Summers, a church member. “Today God is binding us in suffering.”

 

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