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March 8: Sanctuary Congregations Statement Denouncing DOJ Lawsuit

CA Sanctuary Congregations Defend Sanctuary & Denounce DOJ Lawsuit

from 36 Sanctuary Congregations in Northern California
led by through the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity

As a network of 36 Sanctuary congregations in Northern California, we stand firmly in the belief that Sanctuary is a sacred and moral act of solidarity with our immigrant neighbors under attack from our Federal government. Sanctuary is a perennial response to a government which unjustly persecutes members of its own society: from Sojourner Truth and the Underground Railroad to the Sanctuary church movement of the1980’s which offered protection for refugees from Central America.

Sanctuary is an ancient religious practice which precedes, and will outlast the policies of the current administration. As a Sanctuary network of congregations we are committed to advocacy, accompaniment and building networks of protection for immigrant neighbors impacted by detentions, deportation, and a broken immigration system.

Sanctuary today is an act of decency and moral action in the face of the Trump administration’s policies to indiscriminately detain, deport and harm families. It is a necessary action in light of 30 years of congressional inaction to pass immigration reform and adequately address the economic root causes and US military policy which force people to migrate. We cannot stand by idly in the face of bigotry, scapegoating, and violations of fundamental human rights by the Department of Justice, Homeland Security and the Trump Administration. It is, in fact, ICE which is violating due process, the constitution, and universal human rights.

Today, we denounce the Department of Justice’s latest lawsuit against the State of California, for we stand by the CA Values Act (SB 54), AB 450, and AB 103 which protect the integrity of our values, families and the very fabric of our common life in California. Our state laws that limit local involvement in painful deportations, uphold worker rights for all, and challenge the indignity of detention are vital steps to recognizing our common humanity.

We denounce the racist and demonizing mischaracterization of immigrant communities, including those who have a past conviction. Those who have past convictions have paid their debt to society and are a vital part of our families and communities. We believe in transformation and that no one should be separated from their family, and deported to a place they hardly know.

We call on the leadership of our elected officials to stand firm in California values and call on them to support legislation and allocation of resources to strengthen networks of protection in our state. No amount of political intimidation will deter us or silence our unwavering commitment to defend our values of equality and compassion.

Buena Vista United Methodist Church
Congregation Rodef Sholom
First Church Berkeley
First Congregational Church of Palo Alto, UCC
First Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, San Francisco
Lakeshore Avenue Baptist Church
Oakland Catholic Worker
Redwood City Unitarian Universalist Ch
Shomeret Shalom Global Congregation
Sisters of Mercy
St.John of God Catholic Church
St. John’s Presbyterian Church
St. Mary and St. Martha Lutheran Church
Unitarian Universalists of San Mateo
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Redwood City
University Lutheran Chapel

For more information about becoming a sanctuary congregation, contact info@im4humanintegrity.org

Categories
Updates

David Bacon, Capital & Main: “A Detention Center Vigil Defies La Migra”

At the end of the detention center vigil, the people assembled there clap, shout and make enough noise that the detainees inside can hear them.  “We want them to know we’re here, that someone knows they’re inside, and that our community cares what happens to them,” explains Reverend Deborah Lee, director of the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity (IM4HI). “When we started in 2011 our idea was to put out a call to people of faith and conscience concerned about what was happening to immigrants, to bear witness and provide a way for them to act on that concern.”

Read more here.

Or here.

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Updates

March 2018 Calendar of Faith & Immigration Events & Actions

Building Beloved Community: Strength From the Roots (Fuerza de la Raíz) to strengthen solidarity and deepen leadership of our community members through the sharing of song and stories led by Trabajo Cultural Caminante’s facilitator Francisco Herrera and other world renown artists and will culminate with a concert celebrating community and social change. Email: franciscoherrera01@gmail.com
March 10th – Westside Missionary Baptist Church – 9 am – 12 pm

Honduras Faith Delegation Report Backs
Join us for our Faith Delegation Report Back on these two dates:
Contact: mnoriega@im4humanintegrity.org for more information

March 13th from 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Jesuit School of Theology 1735 LeRoy Ave. Berkeley

March 17th from 6 PM – 8 PM in Spanish
Primera Iglesia Presbiteriana Hispana 1941 High St. Oakland.

March 11th – 11 am – Let Our People Go Vigil at West County Detention Facility.

March 18th: 4:30 pm: Theater and Song for Immigrants @ Kehilla Community Synagogue.

March 25th – 1 -3 pm – PUBLIC FORUM : Current Threat to Immigrants: TPS, DACA, Detention@ Congregation Beth El Social Hall, 1301 Oxford St., Berkeley Come learn how recent immigration policies affect members of our community. Meet representatives from organizations working for immigrant justice. Open to All.

March 25th EVENT 3 pm– Sanctuary Renewal Ceremony for the First Unitarian Universalist Society of SF, 1187 Franklin St, San Francisco

Interfaith Immigration Coalition Meetings: monthly near you!
East Bay Interfaith Immigration Coalition (EBIIC):
March 14th – 9 am @ University Lutheran Chapel, 2425 College AVE., Berkeley

Multifaith Immigration Coalition for Action in CCC – March 16th 9:30 – 11 am @ Mt. Diablo Unitarian Universalist Church, 55 Eckley Ln, Walnut Creek.

San Francisco Interfaith Coalition on Immigration – March 14, 6 pm – 7:30 pm @ St. Ignatius Spiritual Life Center

Peninsula Interfaith Coalition on Immigration – March 20th, 3-5 pm @Mercy Center Burlingame

NEXT VIGIL: April 7th 11 am: Passover Seder Vigil Outside West County Detention Facility

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY LAUNCHES NEW RAPID RESPONSE EDUCATION & LEGAL HOTLINE:
24 hour hotline in case of ICE arrests or sightings: 1-925-900-5151
Please call and verify before spreading rumors!

ACTION FOR THE MONTH:

• Talk to Daniel (Dpinell@im4humanintegrity.org) if you are Interested in Spiritual Care Committee, being formed to better support the spiritual and physical needs of detainees and their families.

• SEND A LETTER OF HOPE AND SOLIDARITY TO THOSE DETAINED AT WCDF
Please pick up a Name with the Booking Number from us Today:

Name
Booking Number (#CC)
West County Detention Facility
5555 Giant Highway
Richmond, CA 94806

(You must include Sender name and address. If you do not want to put your own, you may use IM4HI, 310 8th St. #310, Oakland, CA 94607.)

Please Read Mailing Instructions
All envelopes must include the full name of the person you are trying to reach, their booking number, the sender’s name, and the sender’s address. Incoming mail may be screened for contraband and read before reaching the recipient. Mail may not contain extra envelopes, stamps, cash, personal checks, sexually explicit images, or polaroid photographs. The envelopes may not have any writing or drawings on them except for the addresses and the mail may not include anything written or drawn in marker, crayon, or colored pencil. People in detention may purchase stamps, paper, envelopes, and writing utensils from the commissary. Indigent residents may receive correspondence materials for up to two letters a week in the indigent kit through commissary.