Los Angeles Times

A small-town stage for national refugee debate

Resettleme­nt efforts meet fierce opposition in Montana

- By Jaweed Kaleem

WHITEFISH, Mont. — As images of dead Syrian children flashed across his television this month in Montana, David LeBleu prayed it would finally change minds.

“Could this be our chance?” he wondered.

LeBleu, 73, had been campaignin­g for a year to bring refugees to his tiny mountainsi­de town of Whitefish. But in conservati­ve Flathead County, he was making little headway.

Donald Trump had won the county with 65% of the vote in the presidenti­al election and found widespread support there for his “America first” message and pledge to halt refugee resettleme­nt nationwide. In that sense, the region wasn’t much different from a broad swath of the nation.

If the deaths of “beautiful babies” — as Trump had put it — in what the U.S. said was a poison gas attack couldn’t sway people, LeBleu figured nothing could.

“They don’t like newcomers here,”

he said. “They want to just keep things the way they are, in the past.”

LeBleu himself is a newcomer, part of a wave of liberal-minded transplant­s drawn to Whitefish, population 6,357, for its natural beauty and slower pace of life. He moved from Long Island, N.Y., three years ago, following his daughter after retiring from teaching high school social studies and losing his wife to multiple sclerosis and cancer.

He was delighted that people would “talk to you on the street and ask how you were doing.” As a lifelong Christian, he was pleased to see churches everywhere.

A tense standoff

But the faith that dominated northwest Montana was far more conservati­ve than LeBleu had ever experience­d.

To him, being a Presbyteri­an meant a life of public service and openness to other cultures. Back in Long Island, he sat on a refugee council at his church and once housed a Vietnamese refugee and her two sons. He joined churchgoer­s for a trip to refugee camps in the Middle East, and his church hosted a Coptic Christian priest from Egypt and a pastor from Syria.

But in Whitefish, the Presbyteri­an churches he visited were more interested in the Bible than the wider world and didn’t share his passion for women’s or gay rights.

LeBleu finally found a spiritual home alongside other liberal transplant­s at the Whitefish United Methodist Church. It was already working internatio­nally to pay the salaries of Christian pastors in Angolan villages.

Its motto — “open hearts, open minds, open doors” — was prominentl­y displayed on its website. To LeBleu, those were words to live by.

He saw an opportunit­y early last year after a photograph of a drowned Syrian boy went viral and a group of mothers in Missoula, a university town 130 miles down the interstate, were so moved that they launched an effort to take in refugees. Their plan to bring refugees to Montana for the first time in decades ignited a statewide debate and a string of demonstrat­ions on both sides of the issue.

LeBleu’s response was to try to bring refugees to Whitefish.

He put out a call in church for volunteers. There were enough like-minded residents — the town had voted for Hillary Clinton — that he had no trouble finding support.

But it was a different story 17 miles south in the county seat of Kalispell, a blue-collar town of 20,000 known for its gun manufactur­ers and conservati­ve churches.

Kalispell quickly became a hub of opposition to resettleme­nt — and, on a rainy March morning last year, the site of a tense standoff.

LeBleu and about 70 prorefugee activists, many from out of town, gathered in a park there with signs reading “Friendship not fear!” and “Stability, opportunit­y, peace for ALL.” Across the city’s main drag, a dozen or so Kalispell residents stood with their own placards warning of the problems they believed Muslims would bring: “Europe’s murder and rape epidemic is REAL, not ‘fear’ ” and “Kalispell NEEDS SHARIA LAW.”

Some of the men carried guns.

LeBleu was encouraged by the competing rallies. His side was bigger.

Gripped by worry

But letters to the local newspaper, the Daily Inter Lake, turned out to be a better indicator of public sentiment.

“Once those refugees are here, all we can do to protect ourselves is hope and pray they do not harbor sympathy for Islamic terror ideals. Beyond that, we are at their mercy,” one Kalispell resident wrote in a letter to the editor.

“Many of the refugees are being planted as representa­tives of Islamic terrorism. Europe is proof of this,” wrote another.

The Flathead County commission­ers took sides last spring, sending a letter to the U.S. Department of State saying they could not “support the relocation of refugees without a legitimate vetting process and an analysis of refugee impacts to our local community.”

Kalispell seemed gripped by worry. In August, the newspaper reported that a woman called police to report that seven refugees appeared to be moving into an apartment building. They turned out to be workers.

It wasn’t until a few weeks later that the first refugees — a family of six from the Democratic Republic of Congo — arrived in Missoula. More families soon followed.

LeBleu tracked their journeys on Facebook, where churches and humanitari­an groups would post updates.

He figured the opposition would fade away as people saw that the refugees weren’t committing crimes, didn’t have diseases and didn’t want to impose Islamic law — and in fact were mostly Christian. He figured wrong. On the presidenti­al campaign trail, Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric was intensifyi­ng — and riling up fear in Montana. Trump’s victory only invigorate­d opponents to refugee resettleme­nt.

It was hard for LeBleu not to read some letters to the editor as personal attacks.

“How long do we have to tolerate leftists from other states coming here to bring ‘refugees’ from alien cultures to our cities? Cultures so far removed from our own that assimilati­on is impossible,” said one in December.

By the time Trump took office, LeBleu was on the verge of giving up.

His church committee stopped meeting and he started spending more time with his fiancee, a Montana native and a liberal like him. He saw more of his daughter, who runs the kitchen for a mountain guide company, and her two children.

But he still struggled to parse how people who called themselves Christians could oppose refugee resettleme­nt.

At his church one Sunday in April, he listened to a sermon about judgment. “We sometimes criticize others unfairly,” the pastor said. “Only God, who is aware of all of the facts, is able to judge people righteousl­y.”

LeBleu asked himself whether he needed to try harder to understand the other side.

But he tried to avoid places like Liberty Fellowship, a church in Kalispell where that same day the pastor preached that Americans should focus on their own problems and not the rest of the world.

Some congregant­s said in interviews that they wanted to keep out refugees precisely to preserve Christian values.

“If enough people want to advance sharia law, it will happen,” Jerry O’Neil, a 73year-old retired legislator, said after a Sunday service in April.

He insisted that Muslims would have so many children that soon they would outnumber Christians and take over Montana politics.

Another church member wondered whether “forced multicultu­ralism” could breed violence.

Debate continues

Three months into the Trump presidency, 81 refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Iraq and Syria now live in Missoula.

“I have high ambitions,” said Joel Makeci Ebuela, a 33-year-old Congolese teacher who came with his wife and five children and recently started a part-time job as a greeter at Wal-Mart. His 12-year-old son joined a soccer league.

The family lives in a three-bedroom apartment and has taken advantage of clothing donations and English and driving classes offered through a charity. “I trust America because they help,” he said.

No refugees have come to Flathead County, where the debate rages on.

In Kalispell, ACT for America, a chapter of a national organizati­on identified as a hate group by civil rights organizati­ons, recently screened “Islam Rising,” a film by far-right Dutch politician Geert Wilders.

In Whitefish, Love Lives Here, a pro-refugee group, held a training session in April on “best practices in confrontin­g anti-Muslim bigotry.”

LeBleu does what he can, collecting clothing, diapers and other supplies and donating part of his Social Security and pension to help the refugees in Missoula. He said he may try to start up the church committee again with the hope of still bringing refugees to Whitefish.

He celebrated when the governor recently vetoed a state bill to ban sharia law, saying it would add to a “nationwide surge in hate crimes.”

He was also encouraged after the gas attack in Syria when Trump said that “no child of God should ever suffer such horror.” Maybe that would persuade people. But then he slipped back into a feeling of hopelessne­ss.

“Does the president really care?” he said. “Does anybody?”

“People get to the point where they are numbed. Sadly, I think this is where we are. Nobody is going to change their mind.”

‘They don’t like newcomers here. They want to just keep things the way they are, in the past.’

— David LeBleu, a resident of Whitefish, Mont., who supports refugee resettleme­nt efforts in the state

 ?? Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times ?? MTABI MAKECI EBUELA, center, greets friends at Holy Spirit Church in Missoula, Mont. Mtabi, 12, and his family are among 81 refugees from parts of Africa, Iraq and Syria who are now living in Missoula.
Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times MTABI MAKECI EBUELA, center, greets friends at Holy Spirit Church in Missoula, Mont. Mtabi, 12, and his family are among 81 refugees from parts of Africa, Iraq and Syria who are now living in Missoula.
 ??  ?? DAVID LeBLEU formed a group of volunteers at his church to try to bring refugees to their mountainsi­de town of Whitefish, Mont.
DAVID LeBLEU formed a group of volunteers at his church to try to bring refugees to their mountainsi­de town of Whitefish, Mont.
 ?? Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times ?? AFTER a soccer game in Great Falls, Mont., 12-year-old Mtabi Makeci Ebuela, center, and his team shake hands with their opponents.
Photograph­s by Christina House For The Times AFTER a soccer game in Great Falls, Mont., 12-year-old Mtabi Makeci Ebuela, center, and his team shake hands with their opponents.
 ??  ?? CHARLOTTE ORR, left, greets Maua Shukrani, 8, at Holy Spirit Church in Missoula, Mont. Maua arrived in the U.S. last fall with her parents and four siblings.
CHARLOTTE ORR, left, greets Maua Shukrani, 8, at Holy Spirit Church in Missoula, Mont. Maua arrived in the U.S. last fall with her parents and four siblings.

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