Advocates of refugees, immigrants seek to calm postelection fears

IMAGE: CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz

By Theresa Laurence

NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (CNS) — As the American people continue to unpack exactly what the
election of Donald Trump means for the country, those who work with vulnerable
populations such as refugees and immigrants have serious concerns and questions
about what the future holds.

President-elect
Trump made the issue of immigration one of the foundations of his campaign. He
promised to round up those in the country without legal permission and deport them,
and build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border; he also talked about enacting a
ban on Muslims entering the country until a system for what he called “extreme vetting”
of refugees can be put in place.

In
the days following Trump’s election as president, the Catholic Charities Office
of Refugee Resettlement in the Diocese of Nashville began receiving calls from
school counselors seeking assistance for how to talk with refugee children who
are afraid of being sent back to the countries they fled. “These are calls we
haven’t gotten before,” said Kellye Branson, Refugee Resettlement department director.

“We
want to calm their fears,” Branson said, noting that anyone who arrived in the
country through the refugee resettlement program is here legally and faces no
imminent threat of deportation. However, “we’re kind of in a holding position,
waiting to see what policy implications are for the future,” she told the
Tennessee Register, Nashville’s diocesan newspaper.

The
president has the authority to set the number of refugees accepted annually by
the United States. President Barack Obama has raised it from 70,000 in 2015 to
85,000 in 2016 to 110,000 for 2017. Trump could reduce that number for future
years.

Catholic
Charities of Tennessee has decades of experience resettling refugees in this
state. Since its founding in 1962, it has assisted refugees and asylum seekers
and helped them assimilate to American culture and the local community.
Catholic Charities has helped resettle 637 refugees in the Nashville area so
far this year, including refugees from Congo, Somalia and Syria.

While
the world’s refugees wait and hope to be resettled in a more stable and secure
country, those who work with refugees in Tennessee are taking steps to clear up
misconceptions about who refugees are and the rigorous process they must
undergo to reach the United States.

Refugees
are defined as individuals who have had to leave their home country because of
a well-founded fear of persecution. They are targeted because of their
religious or political beliefs, or membership in a particular social class.

Branson
pointed out that the refugee resettlement program “is the most secure way of
entering the U.S. It’s a lengthy process.”

First,
a refugee reports to a representative of the U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees. If a refugee is seeking entry into the U.S., he or she will undergo
vetting from the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI and the State
Department. This involves extensive interviews and background checks, with a
particular focus on any signs of radicalization or connection with a terrorist
group, which would immediately disqualify that person from entry into the U.S.

Branson
understands that Americans are concerned about national security and the
integrity of the refugee resettlement program.

“We
want it to be secure too,” she said. “The people resettling are fleeing the
same people we don’t want to enter the country. We want to safely and humanely
resettle the people who have been persecuted most throughout the world.” She
also noted that less than 1 percent of refugees worldwide ever get resettled.

One
positive outcome of the election so far, Branson said, is a surge in calls from
people interested in volunteering with the Refugee Resettlement office. In the
two days following the election, her office received about 20 calls from
interested volunteers, the same amount they normally receive in a month.

“Now
more than ever, Americans and longtime residents are needed to reach out to our
new arrivals and offer a hand of friendship and welcome,” Branson said.

If
newly arrived refugees can make personal connections with American volunteers,
it can make for a smoother transition to a new culture, help them learn English
and make them feel like a part of the community more quickly. “Developing those
connections is a huge thing for our clients,” Branson said.

Donna
Gann, program coordinator of Immigration Services for Catholic Charities of
Tennessee, said her clients are anxious as well. “There has been an increase in
calls wanting to know what’s going to happen now,” she said.

Maggie
McCluney, a caseworker with the agency’s Immigration and Hispanic Family
Services, echoed Gann, saying that since the election, “it is especially
difficult to keep up with inquiries. Many clients are concerned about
deportation and separation of families. There is a lot of uncertainty.”

If
clients have their paperwork in order and are applying for citizenship, “we are
hopeful that any process currently pending will continue without (increased)
scrutiny,” Gann said via email. “The only clients we are really concerned about
are the DACA recipients,” Gann said, referring to those who are currently
protected under Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Many immigrants
in the country without legal permission who fall under that protection were
brought to the United States by their parents as young children and may not
even remember living in their country of origin.

More
than 720,000 of these young immigrants have been approved for that program,
which protects them from deportation for two-year periods and grants them work
permits. Since DACA was created by executive order, it could be rescinded by
executive order under the new Trump administration, which officially begins with
Inauguration Day Jan. 20.

During
his campaign, Trump vowed to undo what he called Obama’s “overreaching”
executive orders on immigration. “If the threats come to fruition, then they
could be under removal proceedings,” Gann said of those currently protected
under DACA and DAPA, the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful
Permanent Residents program. “That will be an issue we will continue to review
and fight hard against,” she added.


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Laurence is a staff writer at the Tennessee
Register, newspaper of Diocese of Nashville.

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