Urge Congress to Protect Asylum-Seekers and the Asylum Process

In July 2019, the Trump administration enacted a new rule that requires asylum-seekers at the U.S. southern border to apply for—and be denied—asylum in a country through which they traveled en route to the U.S. Migrants that do not fulfill this requirement cannot be eligible to ask for asylum protections in the U.S. This rule effectively bars most Central American migrants - as well as migrants from dozens of other countries and continents - from seeking asylum in the U.S.

Additionally, news reports have continued to circulate about horrific conditions in Border Patrol holding facilities along the southern border, in some cases causing deaths of both children and adults. These claims were confirmed by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Inspector General in a report released in July. Soon after, DHS unveiled new regulations that would end the "Flores Agreement," which protects immigrant children and families from prolonged detention.

Blocking vulnerable people from accessing protection is immoral, cruel, and unnecessary, as is detaining them for prolonged periods in crowded, unsanitary, and inhumane detention conditions.

In Deuteronomy 10:19, and in many other places in Scripture, we are reminded that, “You shall also love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.” Extending hospitality is a calling for all those who follow Jesus, which includes defending the safety and dignity of those who are most vulnerable and away from home.

Urge your Members of Congress to protect asylum-seekers and access to asylum!

Read a Backgrounder or Return to the Office of Social Justice website.

Photo from Time Magazine

Contact your Members of Congress!

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Please encourage others to act by sharing on social media.

My name is {YOUR NAME}. I am your constituent from {CITY, STATE} and ask that you address the highly concerning issue of the treatment of vulnerable families and children at the U.S.-Mexico border.

The reports of children in detention facilities — and the conditions they are being held in — are devastating. There are constant reports of mistreatment and neglect at the hands of small children, and we cannot allow vulnerable migrants to suffer or die in these facilities.

I believe that, except in cases where there is a threat to public safety, families should remain together as they wait for their asylum hearings. 

Thank you for your work and I look forward to your timely action regarding this crisis.