SUBSCRIBE NOW

SIGHT

Be informed. Be challenged. Be inspired.

A “commitment to service”: DC’s faith communities rally to protect bused-in immigrants

US Washington DC migrants1

EMILY NEIL, of Religion News Service, reports that organising efforts in Washington have become a blueprint for other cities…

United States
RNS

The day in April that the first busload of migrants arrived in Washington, DC, happened to be Holy Thursday, the feast on the Christian calendar that remembers Jesus washing the feet of his disciples the evening before his death. 

The Gospel story is about service, of care, Rev Sharon Stanley-Rea explained. Stanley-Rea, a Disciples of Christ minister and then-director of the denomination’s Refugee and Immigration Ministries, showed up at a news conference with a basin of water and a towel after that first bus arrived — symbols, she said, of the spirit of welcome she felt the faith community in the nation’s capital was being called to emulate. 

And not just Christians, she recalled. Holy Thursday fell during Ramadan, the holiest month for Muslims, and Passover, a major Jewish holiday, began a day later.

“Thankfully, from the first moment that the initial bus arrived,” Stanley-Rea said, “I think we need to hold on to the power of, of that timing, as we have continued to see that spirit power, that commitment to service.”

US Washington DC migrants1

Migrants hold Red Cross blankets after arriving at Union Station near the US Capitol from Texas on buses, on 27th April, in Washington DC. PICTURE: AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana/File photo.

Since then, thousands of migrants have been bused to the city, many without having been told where they were going, others told before boarding that after a stop in Washington they would be able to go on to other destinations where they had family members or loved ones. New York, Chicago and most recently Philadelphia began receiving migrants not long after.

The migrants had been sent north from Texas and Arizona, whose Republican governors, Greg Abbott and Doug Ducey, hoped the mayors of Washington, Philadelphia, New York and other cities would fulfill their promises as being a welcoming city for immigrants so that “overrun and overwhelmed border towns can find relief,” Abbott said in a statement at the time.

“You have a lot of faith communities, and groups that were already serving people who are food insecure, or unhoused, kind of well positioned to then transition some of that support to these newly arrived migrants.”

– Elias Johnson, director of CAN.

The Congregation Action Network, a coalition of more than 70 faith-based organisations formed in 2017 in response to the Trump administration’s “Muslim ban,” had begun providing social services and food during the COVID-19 pandemic. When migrants began arriving in Washington this spring, the coalition immediately began meeting the newcomers’ most urgent material needs. 

“You have a lot of faith communities, and groups that were already serving people who are food insecure, or unhoused, kind of well positioned to then transition some of that support to these newly arrived migrants,” said Elias Johnson, director of CAN.

Stanley-Rea said she saw “incredibly creative partnerships” develop in order to greet and support migrants. 

A rotation schedule was set up in which local churches, synagogues, mosques or other houses of worship opened to the migrants on different days of the week. She estimated that Washington-area faith communities have invested more than half a million dollars in sustaining the migrants in the past several months. 



The first face many migrants saw as they stepped off the bus was that of Claudia Tristán, immigration policy director at MomsRising Together, a 16-year-old grassroots organisation that advocates for women’s and children’s issues. Tristán welcomed migrants at the designated drop-off locations and explained the resources available to them. She then transported them to one of the respite centers, where the displaced migrants could get a meal and a change of clothes. 

Tristán said volunteers continue to support immigrants who decide to settle in Washington. Teams of volunteers organized by the Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid Network familiarised the new arrivals with the Washington Metro subway system and helped them enroll their kids in schools and enroll themselves in English-language classes. 

“There’s a lot of all of this sort of background stuff that is happening, that people don’t typically see or hear about, but it’s a lot of work. And there’s a lot of volunteers that are taking up that work, just to make sure that these kids, their parents are feeling welcomed in their new home,” she said. 

US Washington DC migrants3

Claudia Tristán. PICTURE: Courtesy photo

Tristán says the organizing efforts in Washington have become a blueprint for other cities. “Chicago and New York, they were thankfully more prepared because they got to communicate with organizers in DC about what to expect, what resources they need to make sure they have on hand,” she said. 

St Matthew’s Episcopal Church in Hyattsville, Maryland, on the north-east border of Washington, started housing immigrants when the buses began arriving and has continued to serve as a place of refuge for immigrants coming by bus or other means.

The church, whose congregants are 80 per cent Latino, has offered housing for as long as the immigrants need, as well as food and clothing. Once someone secures a job and housing, the church pays for the first month of rent, if possible, so that the person can start off feeling supported. 

Rev Vidal Rivas, who leads St Matthew’s, said that even though the mostly Venezuelan and Nicaraguan immigrants are coming primarily from Pentecostal churches at home, many have stayed in touch with St Matthew’s and told Rivas they aim to settle nearby because of the care and community they’ve found there.

“A church is going to be a church when it welcomes the poor, the marginalized,” Rivas said. “The only thing that needs to motivate us…is love. Because they deserve love.”

US Washington DC migrants2

Rev Sharon Stanley-Rea, left, and Eli McCarthy, right, hold a banner of Our Lady of Guadalupe, during a march with others in support of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program through Capitol Hill, on 12th December, 2017, in Washington. PICTURE: AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin.

CAN and other faith organisations and advocacy groups have recently been fighting legislation being considered by the DC City Council that they say would cause a rift and contribute to tension between unhoused populations in the city who aren’t immigrants and newly arrived immigrants who are also in need of shelter and basic resources. 

The Migrant Services and Supports Act of 2022 seeks to codify support for migrants and stipulates that anyone awaiting immigration proceedings at an office outside of D.C. is ineligible to receive city resources that are otherwise available for unhoused DC residents – but the ICE field office responsible for DC residents is actually in Northern Virginia, and many immigrants bused to the city have immigration hearings scheduled at that office, in Baltimore or at another field office outside of the city itself.

Though the City Council already passed emergency legislation to create an Office of Migrant Services, a public hearing on permanent legislation was held on 20th October, and CAN, Sanctuary DMV and other groups voiced opposition to the bill in its current form. 

“I think faith communities are really well positioned to try to push back against that to say, ‘Look, these are both populations that we care about, that we serve, that we value and want in our communities. And thus, you need to expand services overall and not exclude these migrants from the services,’” Johnson said. 

“I think that we’ll continue to see that faith communities are able to really advocate from that place and bridge some of what otherwise is sometimes a gap in that organising and advocacy,” he added.


We rely on our readers to fund Sight's work - become a financial supporter today!

For more information, head to our Subscriber's page.


The faith communities and other volunteer groups are more nimble than city government, which only in September created an Office of Migrant Services.

Giovana Oaxaca, the program director of migration policy with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, said the human stories of migrants are all too often missing in the political conversation.

Though her work is on the policy side of migrant affairs, Oaxaca hosted a family that arrived by bus from Texas and called it a powerful reminder of why she has dedicated herself to the question of immigration.

“My apartment was filled with the sound of laughter and music. I was cooking arepas with my guests. They also opened up to me about their experience, telling me about the hardships they had endured, their determination, and, of course, the disorientation they were feeling having arrived to Washington, DC, with the bags that they could carry with them, essentially,” she recalled.

“Just having that personal encounter with this family felt like it was a reaffirmation of what policy is trying to do right. If the experience for them had been so dehumanising…connecting to them at that individual personal level felt like a return to what values we speak of when we talk about a more just, a more humane immigration system,” she said. 

Stanley-Rea, noting that “our Scriptures call us to welcome the vulnerable, to be the balm in Gilead, to offer healing to those who have been traumatised,” said that healing cannot come only from handing out benefits.

“It’s got to also come through relationships, it comes through prayers, it comes through the sharing of hearts and the warmth of friendship,” she said. “And all of those are special strengths and gifts I think that faith communities have to offer.”

 

Donate



sight plus logo

Sight+ is a new benefits program we’ve launched to reward people who have supported us with annual donations of $26 or more. To find out more about Sight+ and how you can support the work of Sight, head to our Sight+ page.

Musings

TAKE PART IN THE SIGHT READER SURVEY!

We’re interested to find out more about you, our readers, as we improve and expand our coverage and so we’re asking all of our readers to take this survey (it’ll only take a couple of minutes).

To take part in the survey, simply follow this link…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.