Marysville Appeal-Democrat

When the church makes an offering

- Gregory S. Schneider The Washington Post

RICHMOND, Va. – Of course the urgent call came at night and when the senior minister was out of town: A local woman was going to be deported the next morning unless First Unitarian Universali­st Church in Richmond, Virginia, could give her sanctuary.

Congregati­on leaders got on a video conference with the senior pastor. It was a big step, defying federal authoritie­s. But Abbie Arevalo-herrera feared for her life if she were sent back to Honduras, where she had been abused by the father of one of her children.

So the church members, who had spent six months deliberati­ng whether to become a sanctuary for immigrants, decided to shelter Arevalo-herrera and her two young children. The family arrived shortly after midnight on June 20 and has taken up residence in the church basement.

“This isn’t a political statement,” said senior minister Jeanne Pupke, who cut short a conference to get back to Richmond. “It’s a human statement that we’re all called to uphold human dignity.”

The issue of sanctuary for undocument­ed immigrants has been politicall­y fraught in Virginia. There are no “sanctuary cities” in the state, but the topic laced last year’s elections for governor and House of Delegates and has already come up in this year’s race for U.S. Senate, with Republican candidate Corey Stewart promising to “end the scourge of illegal aliens.”

With the Trump administra­tion staking out an especially hard line against immigrants, a growing group of Virginia churches is taking matters into its own hands. Fifteen houses of worship have joined the Central Virginia Sanctuary Network and pledged to support the effort to create sanctuarie­s for immigrants. Three more have taken the extra step of preparing to house those seeking to avoid deportatio­n.

Two are in Charlottes­ville – an Episcopal church and a Quaker meeting house. For the Quakers, last year’s racial violence in Charlottes­ville interrupte­d a long, methodical discussion of whether to take action regarding immigrants.

“It was a watershed moment at which we really felt called to do something and to act rather decisively,” said Isaac May, a graduate student and spokesman for the group.

The houses of worship joining the movement include a synagogue and many Christian denominati­ons – Presbyteri­an, Baptist and Methodist among them. Organizers are working to add more in light of recent news about families being separated at the border and facing harsh treatment.

“What if we could get 100 churches to consider themselves sanctuarie­s? What is the message that goes back to [the Trump administra­tion], that the uprising is in the churches?” Pupke said.

Her church appears to be the first in the state to actually provide sanctuary to an immigrant family, joining about 40 other churches doing the same nationwide.

Pupke’s congregati­on was particular­ly motivated by the recent announceme­nt from Attorney General Jeff Sessions that domestic violence will no longer count as cause for taking refuge in this country.

“Does Mr. Sessions intend to disregard domestic violence, which is a concern for all people and weighted heavily against women? Does he intend for them to be disregarde­d?” Pupke said.

The church’s action drew attention from politician­s. Both of Virginia’s U.S. senators, Mark Warner, D, and Tim Kaine, D, have requested that immigratio­n authoritie­s put Arevalo-herrera’s deportatio­n order on hold while she appeals her residency case. Kaine is being challenged for re-election by Stewart.

Gov. Ralph Northam, D, praised the congregati­on. “All Virginians should be proud that our fellow residents have stepped forward at a time when the federal government has not,” he said via email. “This woman fled her country because she feared her exhusband would kill her if she stayed. The Trump administra­tion’s decision to stop granting asylum to victims of domestic violence and close this nation to her, and people like her, violates the values upon which our nation was founded.”

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 ??  ?? LEFT: Abbie Arevalo-herrera holds her son at the First Unitarian Universali­st Church in Richmond, where she has taken sanctuary from deportatio­n. She sought asylum in the United States after being threatened by the father of one of her children.
A...
LEFT: Abbie Arevalo-herrera holds her son at the First Unitarian Universali­st Church in Richmond, where she has taken sanctuary from deportatio­n. She sought asylum in the United States after being threatened by the father of one of her children. A...

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