The Arizona Republic

Pastors in Texas find ways to serve fearful immigrants

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

NOMAAN MERCHANT

HOUSTON - On one of his recent visits to the home of an immigrant family, Julio Barquero asked everyone sitting in the living room to stand and join hands. They formed a circle, closed their eyes and prayed.

“Help us in the name of God,” Barquero, a lay minister with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), said in Spanish. “And help the Latino community and the state of Texas.”

Barquero is among pastors serving Texas’ estimated 1.5 million people living in the U.S. illegally who are offering new programs and, in some cases, visiting families fearful of crackdowns on immigratio­n. A new Texas law targeting so-called sanctuary cities comes just as immigratio­n arrests have gone up dramatical­ly in the state’s biggest cities.

In Texas and nationally, some parishes and communitie­s with large population­s of immigrants in the U.S. illegally have reported slightly lower attendance on Sundays, or significan­t dropoffs in attendance at classes or programs outside of prayer services. Others say more immigrants without legal permission are coming to church in search of reassuranc­e and help.

“I’ve visited people in their own families in their apartments, taking communion to them, almost treating them as they are ill or homebound,” said Sam Dunning, director of the Office of Justice and Peace for the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e serving Houston.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in May signed an anti-sanctuary-cities law that would allow local police to ask people about their immigratio­n status during routine stops, though department­s can declare a “place of worship” off-limits for cooperatio­n with federal authoritie­s. The law would also force police chiefs and sheriffs to honor all federal “detainer” requests to hold criminal suspects for possible deportatio­n, with the threat of jail time for officials who don’t comply. Several Texas cities and civil rights groups have gone to court to try to stop the law, which is set to take effect in September.

Texas is both the nation’s largest conservati­ve state, with leaders who push for tougher immigratio­n laws, and one of the nation’s biggest recipients of refugees and other immigrants, with or without legal status. It is also a deeply religious state, with thousands of churches, mosques and temples serving people across race and political lines.

Under Abbott, Texas has lined up behind the immigratio­n priorities of the Trump administra­tion, which has increased immigratio­n-related arrests and promised to try to speed up deportatio­ns. Houston and Dallas were in the top three cities for arrests by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t from January to April. Reports of raids and stakeouts, including at least one near a church shelter in Virginia, have created more fear in immigrant communitie­s. A handful of churches are housing families to shield them from deportatio­n.

Abbott spokesman John Wittman said Texas’ new law “squares directly with Gov. Abbott’s Christian values to protect all innocent lives” by empowering law enforcemen­t to detain “known criminals.”

“The law makes clear that no one attending Sunday Mass has anything to fear,” Wittman said.

The nonprofit Catholic Legal Immigratio­n Network estimates as many as 1.6 million of the 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally could qualify for some form of legal status.

World Relief, which works with evangelica­l churches nationally, said about 35 percent of regional leaders in a recent survey said pastors they supervise were concerned about declines in church attendance. A spokesman for the group, Matthew Soerens, said local leaders were trying to prepare members “for any circumstan­ce,” while also pointing out that most immigrants are unlikely to face deportatio­n.

Barquero and his wife, Lucy, conduct weekly meetings by telephone with people who are afraid or unable to go to church. They also make occasional home around Houston.

“My message is to continue living your life normally,” he said. “Participat­e in defending your rights, yes, but don’t take unnecessar­y risks.”

Guillermo Pena, a pastor at Living Word, a Houston church that offers services in English and Spanish, said the majority of the members of the Spanish-speaking congregati­on are in the U.S. illegally.

“The migrants are practicall­y alone inside a white structure,” Pena said. “At this point, I believe the church needs to understand that we are a church of migrants so we can better understand the problem.” visits

 ??  ??
 ?? JOHN L. MONE/AP ??
JOHN L. MONE/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States