How El Paso copes as ground zero of the border crisis
El Paso, Texas – For Israel Cabrera, it started five weeks ago.
A friend from another church had called. Immigration agents would be releasing 152 migrants, their processing and background checks completed. Could he take them?
Mr. Cabrera, an associate pastor at the Caminos de Vida church, said he needed time to think. We need an answer now, his friend replied.
“Ok,” Mr. Cabrera said. “Yes.”
That left 30 minutes to prepare, and all the church had was a 24-pack of bottled water. By the end of the day, members of the congregation and the community had brought beans, rice, clothes, and blankets. By the end of the week, Caminos de Vida had so many supplies they were helping other churches hosting migrants.
“The amazing thing is, we just said ‘yes.’ That’s all we did,” says Mr. Cabrera. “This is what happens when a community gets together and does something and moves on their own.”
Since the call, Caminos de Vida has been taking in 50 migrants every few days, feeding them, clothing them, and arranging transportation to family or friends in the United States. They are starting to feel the strain, he says while preparing to welcome another 50 migrants. The water bill jumped from $80 to $500; volunteers, many of them elderly, are burning out; and some members of the congregation have left, uncomfortable with what the church is doing.
That tension permeates El Paso…
Click here to read the full article.
- Native justice: How tribal values shape Judge Abby’s court
- Everyone agrees the US needs to fix the border. But how?