San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Needs on border spur action

Faith, sanctuary groups focusing on immigrants

- By Anita Snow

TUCSON, Ariz. — Alvaro Enciso plants three or four crosses each week in Arizona's desert borderland­s, amid the yellow-blossomed prickly pear and whip-like ocotillo, in honor of migrants who died on the northbound trek.

Each colorful wooden memorial denotes where a set of bones or a decomposin­g body was found. Over eight years, the artist has marked more than 1,000 locations across public lands dotted with empty black plastic water jugs and camouflage backpacks beneath circling turkey vultures.

“Anything out here can kill you,” Enciso said. “A blister, a snake, not enough water.”

Protecting migrants and honoring the humanity of those who died on the perilous trail is a kind of religion in southern Arizona where spiritual leaders four decades ago founded the Sanctuary Movement to shelter Central Americans fleeing civil war, and scores of volunteers carry on their legacy today.

Faith-based groups working in migrant activism run the gamut from the Tucson Samaritans, which leaves lifesaving caches of water, food and other provisions in the remote wilderness, to a migrant shelter operated by Catholic Community Services of Southern Arizona.

Enciso's art project, “Where Dreams Die,” fits squarely in that spiritual tradition, though he believes there's nothing overtly religious in memorializ­ing

the dead.

On a recent day he placed a golden cross where the bones of an unknown male were found Sept. 24, 2020. The cause and approximat­e year of the man's death remain undetermin­ed.

“Can you imagine what their families go through, not knowing what happened to them?” Enciso said.

Such activism has roots in the 1981 founding of the Sanctuary Movement, which spread to a more than 500 U.S. Protestant, Catholic and Jewish congregati­ons.

Now 81 and retired, the Rev. John Fife III was pastor at Tucson's Southside Presbyteri­an Church when his Quaker friend Jim Corbett told him Central Americans escaping violence were fleeing to the U.S.

Soon Fife and Corbett, who died in 2001, were smuggling Central Americans into the U.S. and sheltering them in their homes, despite their wives' protests. The church hosted some 13,000 asylum seekers in the '80s, with up

to 100 people sleeping on the floor on a given night.

“I felt that if I didn't help, I would have to resign as pastor,” Fife said recently.

Fife was convicted in 1986 of violating U.S. immigratio­n laws and served five years' probation, but that didn't deter him.

In 2000 he helped create Humane Borders, which maintains water stations with 55-gallon (208-liter) plastic blue barrels. Two years later he co-founded Tucson Samaritans, which sends volunteers into the wilderness to leave water and food. Fife also had a hand in the

2004 creation of No More Deaths, which staffs remote aid camps.

Many of those volunteeri­ng with the groups are of retirement age, like Gail Kocourek.

Every week the Tucson Samaritan volunteer drives donations of clothing and food to Casa de la Esperanza, a new center south of the border in the Mexican town of Sasabe where about 50 migrants a day can get a meal, a shower

and clothes. They sleep at hotels or guest houses in town.

“I don't think anyone deserves to die for trying to make a better life for their family,” Kocourek said.

Often traveling there as well is Dora Rodriguez, who was among 13 Salvadoran­s who survived in 1980 when 13 others died in the broiling sun near Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. Then 19, she remained in Tucson.

“And now, 41 years later, people are still dying out here in the desert,” said Rodriguez.

Customs and Border Protection reports that apprehensi­ons of migrants are way up, with 20,246 such encounters in the Tucson sector alone in April — a 674percent increase over the same month last year — out of 178,622 along the entire four-state border. Rescues of migrants are also up.

“I'm not looking forward to this summer,” said Douglas Ruopp, chairman of Humane Borders. “No matter what we do, people keep dying.”

 ?? Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press ?? Alyssa Quintanill­a, part of the Tucson Samaritans volunteer group, carries a cross to be installed at the site of the migrant who died in the desert.
Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press Alyssa Quintanill­a, part of the Tucson Samaritans volunteer group, carries a cross to be installed at the site of the migrant who died in the desert.

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