26 August 2019, The Tablet

Religious leaders urge US not to cut help for refugees

by CNS

Catholic organisations have petitioned Donald Trump urging him not to go through with plans to end the country's refugee resettlement program


Religious leaders urge US not to cut help for refugees

Migrants from Central America seeking asylum in the U.S., cross the Rio Bravo near Ciudad Juarez, Mexico,
CNS photo/Jose Luis Gonzalez, Reuters

Religious orders, individual religious and Catholic organisations including Pax Christi and Jesuit Refugee Service are among more than 500 religious leaders and groups who signed an letter to President Donald Trump urging his administration not to go through with proposals to end the country's refugee resettlement program.

"We are called by our sacred texts and faith principles to love our neighbour, accompany the vulnerable and welcome the sojourner," they say in the letter, adding: "Our congregations, synagogues and mosques have historically played key roles in assisting refugees with housing, language, employment and social supports necessary for rapid and effective resettlement into U.S. communities."

They say their commitment to offer people refuge from violence and persecution "requires our government to demonstrate the moral leadership upon which our nation was founded".

And they emphasise that faith communities "remain ready and eager to welcome refugees and decry the policies that are preventing refugees from receiving protection at this time".

They also say in the letter that people of faith are "especially distraught by the implications of low refugee arrivals for particular populations of concern such as families seeking to reunite, religious minorities and children".

They note the administration's promises to religious communities in the United States that persecuted religious minorities would be given safety in the United States, but still emphasise that the low arrival numbers mean all communities are in danger.

"We express our deep concern for the impact of low arrivals on religious minorities, including Christians, Muslims and others who find themselves persecuted because of their religious affiliation and are thus left without options to safely practice their faith," they say.

When the Trump administration announced in mid-July that it was considering "zeroing out" the number of refugees accepted by the United States, the chairman of the US bishops' migration committee and leaders of Catholic and other faith-based agencies that resettle refugees implored the government to reject such a move.

"I strongly oppose any further reductions of the refugee resettlement program," said Bishop Joe S. Vasquez of Austin, Texas, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on Migration.

In a statement last month, he continued: "Offering refuge to those fleeing religious and other persecution has been a cornerstone of what has made this country great and a place of welcome."    

After Congress passed the Refugee Act in 1980, the US admitted on average 95,000 refugees annually. More recently, the US has accepted between 50,000 to 75,000 refugees per year. The number was capped at 45,000 after Trump became president in 2017 and was scaled back to 30,000 refugees for 2019.

Before admission to the US, each refugee undergoes an extensive interviewing, screening and security clearance process.

Setting caps on the number of refugees to be accepted from five global regions is done at the beginning of each fiscal year by the president, in consultation with Congress. The deadline for the upcoming consultation is the end of September according to Jen Smyers, director of policy and advocacy for Church World Service. She told reporters during a phone briefing in July that the US secretary of state "makes the final decision".

"The last couple of years have been historically low in terms of refugee resettlement here in the US," said Bill Canny, executive director of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Migration and Refugee Services. "Of the millions of refugees around the world, only about 1 per cent will be resettled, that number will decrease and leave more people vulnerable if these actions come to fruition."

Canny told Catholic News Service in July the administration should reconsider these devastating cuts. "Our military relies on the work of interpreters while in the field and those interpreters are putting their lives and their families lives on the line. To not open our arms to them when they have done so for us, would go against who we are as a nation," he said.
 


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