Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Hudson church considers hosting five Syrian refugee families

-

Hudson — Leaders and members of a Catholic church in Hudson are deciding whether to welcome five Syrian refugee families into their community next summer.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops asked St. Patrick Parish earlier this fall to host the 21 refugees, who are living in a camp in Turkey. The Rev. John Gerritts promised to learn more about the refugee crisis and reach out to parish leadership.

“This is something we’ve never done before,” Gerritts said. “It’s nothing we were looking to do. It’s not part of our immediate mission.”

The church would have to find housing, transporta­tion, government services and employment or schools for the refugees.

So far, many church members have welcomed the idea, but some have expressed safety concerns. Parishione­rs have also wanted to know the type of work refugees do, the children’s age, any medical issues needing immediate attention and what faith tradition they will bring.

Parish trustee Claire Zajac said most of the concerns are based on fear of the unknown or misinforma­tion.

“As a mom and a longtime member of this community, I would not be bringing these 21 people to Hudson if I thought there was either a threat to our community … or if it wasn’t a good choice for those 21 refugees,” she said.

Lutheran Social Service of Wisconsin and Upper Michigan refugee resettleme­nt program manager Mary Flynn said refugees get 90 days of government resettleme­nt assistance, after which faith-based organizati­ons can help smooth the transition.

“When you help a refugee, you’re being an expression of American democracy and American freedom,” Flynn said. “This is how the country expanded through the years, through refugees and immigrants.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States