Daily Times (Primos, PA)

‘Let our voices be heard’: March against immigratio­n raids

- By Jeff Amy

CANTON, MISS. >> The children of Sacred Heart Catholic Church streamed out into Mississipp­i’s heat on a blistering Sunday afternoon, carrying what they said was a message of opposition against immigratio­n raids their parents could not.

“I will not sit in silence while my parents are taken away,” read a sign carried by two Hispanic boys. They were among a group of several dozen marchers who set out on foot from the church to the town square in Canton to protest the 680 migrant arrests at seven poultry plants in Mississipp­i last Wednesday.

“Imagine coming home and not finding your parents,” said Dulce BasurtoArc­e, an 18-year-old community college student, describing how parents of friends were arrested. “We are marching so no other kid has to go through what we went through. Let our voices be heard!”

Basurto-Arce spoke from the steps of the same courthouse in Canton where Martin Luther King Jr. once rallied protesters against segregatio­n in a 1966 “March Against Fear” across Mississipp­i.

Churches were the backbone of the civil rights movement. Today, as President Donald Trump and Republican allies continue to defend the raids, churches have emerged as the top sources of spiritual and material support to the mostly Mexican and Guatemalan workers targeted by the raids.

Some churches are going beyond comfort and material aid, with their response flaring into political opposition. The state’s Catholic, Episcopal, United Methodist and Evangelica­l Lutheran bishops denounced the raids in a joint statement Friday.

The bishops said they would aid the immigrant families, saying there is “an urgent and critical need at this time to avoid a worsening crisis.”

“We are called ... to speak the truth. And the truth is, this is not right,” said Bishop Brian Seage of the Episcopal Diocese of Mississipp­i, speaking at a news conference one day after the raids.

On Sunday, Trump administra­tion officials defended their actions, amid emotional pleas from children to let their parents go.

Acting Customs and Border Protection Commission­er Mark Morgan acknowledg­ed that one video of an 11-year-old sobbing was “emotional” but said the girl was quickly reunited with her mother.

“I understand that the girl is upset. And I get that,” Morgan said on CNN. “But her father committed a crime.”

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan acknowledg­ed that the timing of the raids was “unfortunat­e,” coming hours before Trump visited El Paso, Texas, where a man who told authoritie­s he was targeting Mexicans killed 22 people on Aug. 3. But McAleenan told NBC the operation had been planned for more than a year.

Hours after the officials’ televised appearance­s, more than 250 people filled Sacred Heart to overflowin­g. A few were white people there to show support, but most were Hispanic congregant­s who normally attend the weekly Spanish-language Mass.

Deacon Cesar Sanchez, who is originally from Mexico’s Michoacan state and is studying to be a priest in the Jackson diocese, gave a homily in Spanish in which he spoke of Jesus also being an immigrant and a refugee. He said the church is a pilgrim church and that “God is with his people.”

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Children of mainly Latino immigrant parents hold signs in support of them and those individual­s picked up during an immigratio­n raid at a food processing plant in Canton, Miss., following a Spanish Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Canton, Miss., Sunday.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Children of mainly Latino immigrant parents hold signs in support of them and those individual­s picked up during an immigratio­n raid at a food processing plant in Canton, Miss., following a Spanish Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Canton, Miss., Sunday.
 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Children of mainly Latino immigrant parents hold signs in support of them and those individual­s picked up during an immigratio­n raid at a food processing plant, during a protest march to the Madison County Courthouse in Canton, Miss., following a Spanish Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Canton on Sunday. The raids last Tuesday at poultry plants in Mississipp­i have spurred churches that have been key to providing spiritual and emotional comfort to workers to now step up to provide material aid to jailed or out-of-work church members.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Children of mainly Latino immigrant parents hold signs in support of them and those individual­s picked up during an immigratio­n raid at a food processing plant, during a protest march to the Madison County Courthouse in Canton, Miss., following a Spanish Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Canton on Sunday. The raids last Tuesday at poultry plants in Mississipp­i have spurred churches that have been key to providing spiritual and emotional comfort to workers to now step up to provide material aid to jailed or out-of-work church members.
 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman prays during a Spanish Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Canton, Miss., Sunday. Churches have been key to providing spiritual and emotional comfort to workers following immigratio­n raids at seven Mississipp­i poultry plants, and are now stepping up to provide material aid to jailed or out-of-work church members, even as some church leaders denounce the raids that Republican leaders of the conservati­ve state have applauded.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman prays during a Spanish Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Canton, Miss., Sunday. Churches have been key to providing spiritual and emotional comfort to workers following immigratio­n raids at seven Mississipp­i poultry plants, and are now stepping up to provide material aid to jailed or out-of-work church members, even as some church leaders denounce the raids that Republican leaders of the conservati­ve state have applauded.

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