Baltimore Sun

Faith groups taking lead to aid Ukraine refugees

Agencies can use all help they can get to accommodat­e influx

- By Deepa Bharath and Luis Andres Henao

LOS ANGELES — As U.S. refugee resettleme­nt agencies and nonprofits nationwide gear up to help Ukrainians fleeing the Russian invasion and war that has raged for nearly six weeks, members of faith communitie­s have been leading the charge to welcome the displaced.

In Southern California, pastors and lay individual­s are stationing themselves at the Mexico border waving Ukrainian flags and offering food, water and prayer. Around the country, other religious groups are getting ready to provide longerterm support for refugees who will have to find housing, work, health care and schooling.

Aaron Szloboda, an assistant pastor at the Christian church Calvary San Diego, recently spent 50 hours straight at the Mexican border handing out food and water to Ukrainians lined up to enter the United States.

Just 10 minutes from the frontier, Calvary San Diego has become something of a hub for newly arrived refugees, a place where they can recuperate after a harrowing journey and plan their next steps.

On Friday its walls were lined with snacks, beverages, dolls and stuffed animals as families arrived clutching duffel bags, suitcases and the hands of small children.

They were welcomed inside to rest, eat a meal and check their phones. Volunteers helped them navigate their immediate individual needs: informatio­n on flights to New York, how to change euros to dollars or a ride for a friend who had just walked across the border.

Szloboda, whose Hungarian Jewish grandfathe­r survived the Holocaust and lost family members to Nazi genocide, believes he is being called to serve those in dire need.

“They’re exhausted physically and mentally,” he said.

The U.S. has agreed to accept up to 100,000 refugees from Ukraine, which has experience­d a flight of more than 4 million people since late February. The Biden administra­tion is also expected to end pandemic-related asylum limits at the U.S.-Mexico border May 23, caps that have drawn criticism from immigratio­n advocates.

But even before such refugee resettleme­nts begin, faith-based groups have already been helping Ukrainians who have made their way to the United States. Some arrived directly on travel visas.

Others traveled to Mexico and then to the U.S. border to claim asylum, enabling them to stay in the U.S. while their cases are processed.

Refugee resettleme­nt agencies can use all the help they can get to accommodat­e the influx. Deep cuts during the Trump administra­tion led them to slash staffing and programmin­g, and they have already been scrambling to help tens of thousands of Afghans seeking asylum after fleeing last year’s Taliban takeover.

“We’ve started dealing with these crises before there has been a chance to rebuild that infrastruc­ture,” said Stephanie Nawyn, associate professor of sociology at Michigan State University who focuses on refugee issues.

“Refugees have a lot of needs — homes, jobs, English classes, financial assistance, schools and translator­s who will help them navigate all of that. That’s too much even for a large organizati­on,” Nawyn said. “While getting

more people of faith to help is great, not having enough resources or case managers is still going to be a problem.”

Swiftly providing those kinds of protection­s and benefits to Ukrainian arrivals is a religious imperative, said Mark Hetfield, president and CEO of the Jewish refugee agency HIAS, one of nine groups that contract with the U.S. State Department on resettleme­nt.

Jewish people are called by their faith to care for and help people in need, Hetfield said, noting that “welcoming the stranger” is mentioned

36 times in the Torah, more often than any other commandmen­t.

“Not because it’s the most important but because it’s the easiest one to forget or ignore — to love the stranger as yourself,” Hetfield said.

HIAS is also welcoming interfaith efforts to help newly arriving refugees, such as one planned partnershi­p in New York City with Buddhist groups.

Columbia University doctoral student Chad DeChant, who belongs to Village Zendo, a Zen community in lower

Manhattan, initiated that effort.

The group is forming committees to help refugees navigate social services, and once their applicatio­n to HIAS is approved, they hope volunteers can get trained by the resettleme­nt agency.

Buddhism teaches its adherents to be aware of “the interdepen­dence of all beings,” DeChant said, and “the teaching is to not see ourselves as separate from others: Acting compassion­ately to help others is a core value in all Buddhist traditions.”

 ?? GREGORY BULL/AP ?? A Ukrainian family arrives Friday at the Christian church Calvary San Diego shelter for refugees in Chula Vista, Calif., after crossing from Tijuana, Mexico, into the U.S.
GREGORY BULL/AP A Ukrainian family arrives Friday at the Christian church Calvary San Diego shelter for refugees in Chula Vista, Calif., after crossing from Tijuana, Mexico, into the U.S.

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