Many people have asked us, “What can we do beyond giving money?”
Faithful Witness AT the Border
The Southwest Conference is calling for a week of Faithful Witness at the Border, August 26 – 30, 2018 that will include:
- A humanitarian mission to the Mexican side of the border to visit and take supplies to asylum-seekers in shelters and camped out at the ports of entry due to a slowdown in applications being received.
- Training and strategy sessions around ‘Being an Immigrant Welcoming Congregation’ and ‘Acting as an Advocate and Ally’ with members from the UCC Washington office
- Conversations with local ministry partners in Arizona - The Samaritans and other immigration ministry groups.
- A visit to Operation Streamline immigration court where parents whose children were taken away are appearing in the hope of finding their kids.
Information on housing, transportation, clergy, weather, schedule, travel documents, photos, and social media.
Schedule Updated August 20
What travel documents do I need to cross the U.S. - Mexico border?
The FAQ post is updated with the latest information. If you have questions beyond what is published here, please contact Good Shepherd UCC at (520) 625-1375.
Faithful Witness FOR the Border
We also call congregations and conferences to host their own local Faithful Witness for the Border events that might include:
Begin the process for becoming an Immigrant-Welcoming Congregation
Organize and attend town halls and candidate forums and ask questions about how candidates would approach immigration policy. Set up in-district visits with your members of Congress to share your UCC faith witness on immigration. Submit letters to the editor and editorials in your local and regional papers.
Raise money and collect supplies for humanitarian relief at the border. PLEASE USE THIS VERY SPECIFIC LIST OF SUPPLIES.
Write letters of welcome IN SPANISH that can be distributed to asylum seekers as missives of love and welcome, an alternative message to the government.
Fundraise to support living expenses of migrants seeking asylum and who are prohibited by law from holding employment in the US while their case is processed.
Participate in an immigrant detention visitation program in your area (https://www.freedomforimmigrants.org/visitation-network/)
Partner with local immigrant rights groups to join/organize a rally at an immigrant detention facility for adults, ICE office, or border patrol station nearby. (https://www.ice.gov/detention-facilities)
Host a fellowship event with a local migrants/an immigrant group in your community to get to know one another and listen to their stories.
Contribute to the UCC “Keep Families Together” campaign.
Please share with us how your congregation / association / conference is hosting local Faithful Witness for the Border events.
The following is from an article, Southwest Conference calling all UCC congregations to critical ministry ‘FOR and AT the Border’ written by Connie Larkman, News Director at ucc.org:
United Church of Christ churches, clergy and congregants are reaching out with hope and in faith to migrants at our borders and immigrants across the country. Many more are asking what they can do to respond to the government policies that detain and separate families. The Southwest Conference UCC, acting with Justice and Local Church Ministries, is calling each member of the denomination to build on that immigrant-welcoming effort this fall as one Church to Keep Families Together.
"We hope to shift the thinking of the whole Church toward understanding that border ministry is not geographically focused, but is taking place in every community where migrants live, whether that is in detention or in the community waiting for their cases to be processed," said the Rev. Bill Lyons, Southwest Conference Minister. "That means taking down the walls in our own hearts and preparing ourselves to live into the welcome we proclaim to migrants who are trying to enter our communities as well as our country."
"The United Church of Christ has been very engaged immigrant justice for years in the fight to stop deportations, welcome refugees, keep families together, and push back against racial profiling," said the Rev. Noel Andersen, coordinator of the UCC Collaborative on Immigration, and grassroots organizer for Church World Service. "Our faith communities have been showing up to stop family separations by taking the streets for marches, hosting actions, vigils and press conferences at detention centers and even risking arrest to stand in solidarity with the immigrant community. Our congregations have helped start day labor centers, built Latino ministries from the ground up, hosted immersion education groups to the border and Central America, created humanitarian aid groups for migrants in the desert and provided services or shelter to asylum seekers and refugees from all different regions of the world. As the crisis of family separation rages on, the UCC will continue to educate, mobilize and organize a moral response until there is a sanctuary for all."
That's why the Southwest Conference UCC and its border churches are issuing two calls to action, one for a faithful witness AT the border, in Arizona at United States border with Mexico August 26-30, and another for a faithful witness FOR the border this fall, in cities and towns across America. This two-pronged, organized effort prepares people of faith to welcome immigrants into our country, our communities and our churches, and to advocate for their humane treatment at the hands of the U.S government. Lyons feels there is a great deal of enthusiasm for this type of work.
"The support we've gotten in the SWC as part of the Keep Families Together movement has been tremendous," he said. "We have received donations, notes of encouragement for our volunteers at our border churches, and notes of welcome addressed to asylum seekers camped on the border. Knowing we have committed partners praying for us, supporting us financially, encouraging us in this work, and offering words of welcome to migrants who otherwise are receiving a hateful reception gives us hope!"
"We now have over 100 UCC Sanctuary Congregations across the country with 8 of the nationwide 44 cases currently claiming sanctuary in UCC congregations," Andersen said. "More than 10 conferences have passed Immigrant Welcoming resolutions and hundreds of congregations are voting to become Immigrant Welcoming."
Resolved to be an Immigrant-Welcoming Church by General Synod in 2017, Lyons hopes this one-Church effort, in collaboration with ecumenical partners, provides a framework for multiplying that mission going forward.
"While one of our goals is convergence at the border," Lyons said, "this is a time to see the border in the eyes of the migrants hoping to enter new lives in our communities and accompany them. We need to multiply the number of immigrant welcoming churches with have in this Kairos moment."
Currently, almost $20,000 has been donated to the Keep Families Together fund – $9,000 has already been sent to the Southwest Conf. to assist and shelter people on the border seeking asylum, waiting to be processed and for interviews. The other half will be designated as small grants ($250-$500) for which congregations around the country can apply. The money must be used to support ministries dedicated to assisting Central Americans seeking asylum. Congregations can apply for those grants here.
Churches doing ministry FOR the border can report their plans here.
As Lyons said, "With this work, we can offer immigrants the gospel message 'you are welcome here, and we will help you make a new life.'"
Bookmark the Keep Families Together page for updated information.