Immigration activist arrested after leaving sanctuary
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Elvira Arellano took sanctuary in Adalberto United Methodist
Church in Chicago from Aug. 15, 2006, to Aug. 16, 2007. After traveling
to California to campaign for immigration reform, she was arrested and
deported on Aug. 19 in Los Angeles.
A UMNS file photo by Paul Jeffrey.
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A UMNS Report
By Kathy L. Gilbert*
Aug. 20, 2007
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Arellano hugs her son, Saul, a U.S. citizen, in the church office. A UMNS file photo by Paul Jeffrey.
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Elvira Arellano, an illegal immigrant and member of Adalberto United
Methodist Church in Chicago, was arrested in California and deported to
Mexico on Aug. 19 – four days after she left the Chicago church where
she had received sanctuary for a year.
Arellano, 32, and her 8-year-old son, Saul, a U.S. citizen, had lived
in Adalberto United Methodist Church from Aug. 15, 2006, to Aug. 16,
2007.
On the one-year anniversary of her life inside the church walls, she
announced plans to leave the church and begin a nationwide campaign for
immigration reform.
One day later, she slipped out of the Chicago church unnoticed and
traveled to California. There, she was arrested after leaving a Los
Angeles Catholic church where she urged people to lobby Congress to take
up immigration reform after the summer recess.
Chicago immigration activist Emma Lozano, wife of the Rev. Walter
Coleman, pastor of Adalberto, was with Arellano and her son when she was
arrested, according to news reports. Coleman told The Chicago Tribune
that Arellano was deported to Tijuana, Mexico, but was in good spirits
and ready to continue the struggle against separation of families due to
the exportation of illegal immigrants. Her son remained in the United
States and was under the care of Coleman and Lozano, according to news
reports.
Seeking refuge
Adalberto is a storefront church on the west side of Chicago and
served as the site of an Aug. 15 news conference for Arellano and an
immigration rights rally that brought supporters from within the church,
immigrant rights organizations, labor unions and Latino and
African-American community organizations.
Arellano announced that, after several weeks of fasting and praying,
she had decided to leave the church and speak out for immigration
reform. She added that she was fully aware of the risks of possible
arrest, jail time or deportation.
"I call on all people of faith to pray for
wisdom, courage and compromise over a complex issue that deeply divides
the civil discourse of this country and affects millions of lives."
-Bishop Hee-Soo Jung
"When I entered sanctuary, I promised God that I would stay here and
raise my son in his country, no matter what the consequences," Arellano
said.
"I accept whatever God gives me to accept, but I ask my community to join me as we walk together for our dignity."
Bishop Hee-Soo Jung, episcopal leader of the United Methodist
Northern Illinois Annual (regional) Conference, said the conference has
supported Arellano and the church for the past year.
"We have supported this church in prayer as it offered Elvira the
chance to practice the centuries-old tradition of sanctuary, which draws
upon a tradition of non-violent protest and civil disobedience," he
said.
Noting that immigration is an issue that divides the nation, Jung
said that "the church will continue to raise a voice for justice for all
of God's people. The church will continue its commitment to families
and laws that unite rather than separate families."
Crossing borders
Arellano began her journey in Michoacán, Mexico, where she was the
youngest of five children. Her father was an agricultural laborer who
lost the land that he had farmed. Arellano moved to a bigger city in
Mexico, hoping to find work as a secretary to help support her family.
"I had a very beautiful life there," she said, "but tough economic decisions."
She walked across the border into the United States in 1997 with
hopes of earning enough money to support her family in Mexico. She gave
birth to Saul and was working cleaning airplanes at O’Hare International
Airport when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested
her and ordered her deportation in 2002.
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United Methodist Bishops Minerva Carcaño and Hee-Soo Jung pray with
Arellano and Saul in December 2006. A UMNS file photo by Linda S.
Rhodes.
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"This country says that I broke the law by crossing the border and
working without proper papers. I did that," Arellano acknowledges. "Yet,
I am a worker, and you offered me work. I am a consumer, and you
accepted my hard-won earnings. I am a taxpayer, and you took my taxes."
Arellano said receiving hate mail was the most difficult part of the
past year while in sanctuary. "I don’t hate the people who have sent
these letters to me, I pray for God to forgive them," she said.
"I am not challenging anyone. When God created the world, he did not
create borders between countries. He created people to love and help
each other. I am just bringing to light what those who are in power
don’t want to see."
Jung said, "While people of faith may disagree on the best ways to
fix this nation’s unworkable and outdated immigration laws, we affirm
that the Bible directs Christians to care for foreigners in our midst
(Exodus 23:9) and reminds us that we too are sojourners (Leviticus
25:23)."
Jung said Jesus' most pointed description of how human beings should
act toward each other is in Luke 10:33-34, the story of the Good
Samaritan.
"The story of the Good Samaritan reveals the radical love of God as
expressed by Jesus Christ. This love transcends race, nationality and
religion. It is a love that cries for justice and peace; it is a love
that is sorely needed in the world today. I call on all people of faith
to pray for wisdom, courage and compromise over a complex issue that
deeply divides the civil discourse of this country and affects millions
of lives."
*Gilbert is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in
Nashville, Tenn. Susan Dal Porto, Northern Illinois Conference
communicator, contributed to this report.
News media contact: Kathy L. Gilbert, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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The Social Principles: Refugees, Immigrants and Visitors to the United States
Responding with faith to immigration
Justice for Our Neighbors: Offering Hospitality to the Immigrant in our Midst
Northern Illinois Annual Conference |