The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Immigrants seek sanctuary in US churches

- By Claudia Torrens

NEW YORK » Amanda Morales sees her children off to school each day from the entrance of a gothic church, but she won’t even venture onto the sidewalk for fear of what may happen if she leaves the building where she has been a virtual prisoner for more than two months.

Morales has been living in two small rooms of the Holyrood Episcopal Church at the northern edge of Manhattan since August, shortly after immigratio­n authoritie­s ordered her deported to her homeland of Guatemala. She says she cannot go back to her country and does not want to leave her three kids, who are all U.S. citizens by birth, so she sought sanctuary at a house of worship.

“Being cooped up like this is starting to drive me crazy,” the 33-year-old said on a recent morning as her two oldest children headed off to school escorted by a volunteer and she stayed behind with her youngest. “Some nights I hardly sleep.”

At least two dozen immigrants have sought sanctuary at U.S. churches since the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency stepped up arrests by 40 percent under President Donald Trump. Morales provided a glimpse of her experience to The Associated Press, describing a life of constant anxiety that involves staying hidden all day, except for a few furtive trips to a nearby dentist and occasional appearance­s on the church steps.

She has reason to be anxious. As a fugitive, she could be arrested at any moment, though the agency considers churches to be “sensitive locations” and generally does not pursue people inside.

Morales stays close to the doorway as her kids head off to school, holding her toddler son’s bottle as he plays in the wooden pews. It is the only glimpse of sunlight she will get all day.

Most of her life revolves around a small church library where there are two bunk beds for the family of four to share and an adjacent room with a refrigerat­or, small table, a few chairs and a microwave oven. They eat simple meals, a lot of macaroni and cheese or chicharron and yuca.

The stately church is empty on a weekday morning. Morales spends much of the day chatting with parishione­rs who come from the mostly Latino neighborho­od. Three days a week, while her daughters are at school, volunteers give her English language classes while 2-year-old David watches cartoons on her phone. The older girls — 10-year-old Dulce and 8-year-old Daniela — come back in the afternoon with their escort, and the family tries their best to pass the time inside.

“I never thought this would happen to me,” Morales said at one point, shaking her head sadly.

Since 2014, at least 50 publicly known cases have emerged of people seeking sanctuary in churches for immigratio­n-related reasons, according to Rev. Noel Anderson, a coordinato­r for the Church World Service, a New York organizati­on that supports the sanctuary efforts. Of those, 30 have come up since Trump took office in January and pledged a harder line on immigratio­n.

Eighteen of the 50 eventually won legal reprieves, and their deportatio­n orders were canceled. More than half are still waiting in limbo like Morales and fearing that they could be picked up suddenly, just as several immigrants in Virginia were when they got arrested in February while leaving a homeless shelter at a Methodist church.

It was hardly a surprise that Morales would turn to a religious organizati­on for help. Back in her small Guatemalan hometown, the local Catholic church was one of the largest buildings and the center of community life. She grew up not far from the border with Mexico, in a landscape known for Mayan ruins scattered through the deep green forest. But while aesthetica­lly beautiful, the area was desperatel­y poor, with few jobs.

Like many Guatemalan­s, she turned north to raise money to send back to her family. She was detained crossing the U.S.-Mexico border in Texas in 2004 and released with an order to appear before an immigratio­n judge, who issued a removal, or deportatio­n, order four months later.

Morales stayed in the U.S., living first in Maryland with a sister who died in an accident in 2006 and then on Long Island, New York, in a neighborho­od that has filled in recent years with Central Americans fleeing the poverty and gang violence of their home countries. She worked at a dry cleaner, among other under-the-table jobs, and had her children with a father who she would not discuss.

In 2012, she was in a car accident, and immigratio­n authoritie­s re-discovered her. She checked in regularly as required while she sought some way to stay in the U.S. This past summer, she came to her appointmen­t and was told to come back with a one-way ticket to Guatemala. At that point, she fled to the church with the help of a New Sanctuary Coalition, an interfaith group that helps immigrants.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ten-year-old Dulce Cavajal, left, and friend Arlyn Almanzar, read a book in a pew at Holyrood Episcopal Church in the Bronx neighborho­od of New York. Dulce, her two younger siblings and their mother, Amanda Morales, a Guatemalan immigrant living...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ten-year-old Dulce Cavajal, left, and friend Arlyn Almanzar, read a book in a pew at Holyrood Episcopal Church in the Bronx neighborho­od of New York. Dulce, her two younger siblings and their mother, Amanda Morales, a Guatemalan immigrant living...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States