Baltimore Sun

Churches answer call in immigratio­n sweep threat

Informatio­n, workshops and sanctuary offered

- By Sophia Tareen

CHICAGO— As a nationwide immigratio­n crackdown loomed, religious leaders across the country used their pulpits Sunday to quell concerns in immigrant communitie­s and spring into action to help those potentiall­y threatened by the operation.

AChicago priest talked during his homily about the compassion of a border activist accused of harboring immigrants, while another city church advertised a “deportatio­n defense workshop.”

Dozens of churches in Houston and Los Angeles offered sanctuary to anyone afraid of being arrested. In Miami, activists handed out flyers outside churches to help immigrants know their rights in case of an arrest.

“We’re living in a time where the law may permit the government to do certain things but that doesn’t necessaril­y make it right,” said the Rev. John Celichowsk­i of St. Clare de Montefalco Parish in Chicago, where the nearly 1,000-member congregati­on is 90 percent Latino and mostly immigrant.

While federal immigratio­n officials were mum on details, agents had been expected to start a coordinate­d action Sunday targeting roughly 2,000 people, including families, with final deportatio­n orders in 10 major cities, including Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and Miami.

Activists and city officials reported some U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t activity in New York and Houston a day earlier, but it was unclear if it was part of the same operation. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio confirmed on Twitter that there were three incidents involving ICE on Saturday, but agents didn’t succeed in rounding up residents. The Houston advocacy group FIEL said two people were arrested there Saturday.

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan would not answer questions about the operation at an unrelated briefing in Washington on Sunday.

The renewed threat of mass deportatio­ns has put immigrant communitie­s even more on edge since Trump took office on a pledge to deport millions living in the country illegally. While such enforcemen­t operations have been routine since 2003, Trump’s publicizin­g its start, and the politics surroundin­g it, are unusual.

With Sunday as the anticipate­d start, churches have been trying to strategize a response.

Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, wrote a letter to Archdioces­e priests this month saying, “Threats of broad enforcemen­t actions by ICE are meant to terrorize communitie­s.” He urged priests in the Archdioces­e — which serves over 2 million Catholics — not to let any immigratio­n officials i nto churches without identifica­tion or a warrant.

The Rev. Robert Stearns, of Living Water in Houston, organized 25 churches in the city to make space available to any families who wanted to seek sanctuary while they sorted out their legal status. A dozen churches in the Los Angeles areas also declared themselves sanctuarie­s.

Attendance at church services on Sunday varied.

The early morning crowd for Spanish-language Mass was slightly less than usual at St. Clare de Montefalco, where stacks of paper advising immigrants of their rights during immigratio­n arrests sat on card tables outside the sanctuary.

Another Chicago church run by vocal immigrant rights advocates reported a big drop in attendance, however.

Nearly all congregant­s at Adalberto United Methodist are living in the country illegally, and the Rev. Emma Lozano attributed the large number of no-shows to fear. She said street vendors who sell food outside the church also were absent.

But that didn’t stop Doris Aguirre, who is from Honduras and has a final deportatio­n order, from attending.

She said she will keep fighting her case and for her family, who have mixed citizenshi­p status. Her husband is a naturalize­d U.S. citizen from Mexico, her son, born in Honduras, has protection from deportatio­n through an Obama-era program for young people, and her daughter, 17-year-old Izaithell Aguirre, was born in the U.S.

The teenager said she worried about her mom.

“I shouldn’t let that stop me from doing what I normally would do. I still have to live my life,” she said.

In Los Angeles, the Rev. Fred Morris looked out over his congregati­on at the North Hills United Methodist Hispanic Mission and was relieved to see everyone who usually attends the early Sunday morning service.

“Everybody is nervous,” Morris said. “They are angry, very angry at being terrorized by our president.”

 ?? JULIUS CONSTANTIN­E MOTAL/AP ?? Hundreds of marchers opposing the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t plans pass an elevated train station Sunday in the Queens borough of New York.
JULIUS CONSTANTIN­E MOTAL/AP Hundreds of marchers opposing the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t plans pass an elevated train station Sunday in the Queens borough of New York.
 ??  ?? Celichowsk­i
Celichowsk­i

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