The Arizona Republic

Immigrants find sanctuary in Austin church network

- CLAUDIA LAUER

AUSTIN, Texas - Senior Minister Meg Barnhouse knows she’ll need beds, a dresser, chairs and a mirror to make the classroom at the First Unitarian Universali­st Church of Austin feel more like a home for a mother and her young daughter who are still deciding whether they will become the latest immigrants seeking sanctuary from deportatio­n by moving into a church.

It would be the second time Barnhouse’s congregati­on had offered sanctuary. She was hesitant in 2015 because of the unknown legal and insurance risks, but this time she agreed immediatel­y.

There is growing fear in the city’s immigrant community as President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n and executive orders go into effect. And as more than 50 Austin area residents were detained in U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t deportatio­n raids last month, a growing number of churches in the Austin Sanctuary Network are volunteeri­ng to offer physical shelter or support to churches that do.

The Austin Sanctuary Network has broadened in the last year from a handful of churches and advocates to more than two dozen congregati­ons and religious groups, three labor unions, several nonprofit groups and dozens of individual volunteers. This mirrors the loosely organized national sanctuary movement that has grown to more than 800 churches and congregati­ons, with a good portion of those joining since Trump was elected.

“It’s bewilderin­g for people at this point. It’s like trying to repair furniture when the house is on fire,” said Pastor Jim Rigby, whose congregati­on at St. Andrew’s Presbyteri­an Church in Austin has provided sanctuary to Guatemalan immigrant Hilda Ramirez and her 10-year-old son, Ivan, for more than a year . “Opening our arms to our neighbors goes without question.”

Pastor Laura Walter’s small Presbyteri­an congregati­on in Bee Cave, 12 miles west of Austin, hopes her church can expand the network to reach immigrant communitie­s outside city limits. They are still discussing whether the small church has room to offer shelter or whether they could get a permit to build a temporary shower.

“Our faith calls us to live this out,” Walters said. “In the near future we’ll be at the very least helping support refugees and asylum seekers.”

The churches are relying on a 2011 ICE policy directive telling agents to avoid “sensitive areas” such as churches, hospitals and schools when conducting deportatio­n actions under most circumstan­ces. Federal immigratio­n officials said that policy is still in effect, but recent immigratio­n arrests around the U.S., including inside courthouse­s, are increasing fears.

Austin, a liberal enclave in a conservati­ve state, has had a strong base of immigratio­n activists for years in opposition to a previous sheriff, who cooperated with ICE requests to hold inmates for possible deportatio­n.

During the city’s involvemen­t in the Secure Communitie­s Program 7/87/8, an average of 19 people were deported from Travis County each week. Trump has revived the program.

Sheriff Sally Hernandez, who took office in January, has decreased cooperatio­n with immigratio­n officials by not automatica­lly granting requests to hold immigrants for possible deportatio­n. Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has withheld nearly $1.5 million in state grant funds from Travis County in response.

A Department of Homeland Security report this week singled out Travis County and a handful of other counties for denying immigrant detention requests, although local officials pushed back against some of the informatio­n in the report.

Many of the pastors say they are teaching civil disobedien­ce when necessary, but because the immigrants are openly declaring sanctuary and letting immigratio­n officials know where they are, they don’t believe they are violating the law.

 ??  ?? HIlda uses the kitchen at the church. There is growing fear in Austin’s immigrant community as President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies and executive orders go into effect.
HIlda uses the kitchen at the church. There is growing fear in Austin’s immigrant community as President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n policies and executive orders go into effect.

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