NOGALES,
Sonora, Mexico (CNS) — Through many “ups and downs,” God “has led us to this
day,” said Jesuit Father Sean Carroll, head of Kino Border Initiative, at the
official blessing of a new 18,000-square-foot facility at the international
border in Nogales.
10th Annual Kino Border Initiative Dinner ‘Hand in Hand, We Can’
Saturday, March 14
5 p.m.: Cocktail Reception and Entertainment
6:30 p.m.: Program and Dinner
Program presented by Executive Director Fr. Sean Carroll, SJ
The
center, in the state of Sonora, is just across the border from Nogales,
Arizona, which is in the Tucson Diocese.
More than
400 volunteers, supporters and migrants crowded into the facility Feb. 12 to
hear from religious and civic leaders, before Bishop José Leopoldo González
González of Nogales, Mexico, blessed and cut a ribbon on the new Migrant
Outreach Center.
Tucson’s
Bishop Edward J. Weisenburger and retired Bishop Gerald F. Kicanas were at the
Vatican for their “ad limina” visit at the time and were unable to attend.
The $1.5
million facility replaces the humble “comedor,” or dining hall, across the
street that was established in 2009. Since then, the hall has distributed two
meals a day for the poor blocked from entering the U.S. or who have been
returned from the U.S. while their asylum cases are pending.
The need for the meals has only grown. For example, according to the Kino Border Initiative’s website, in 2016, the comedor served an estimated 46,000 meals; in 2018, the number was 55,633.
For those
same years, the number of women and children seeking refuge at the initiative’s
Nazareth House, more than doubled from 380 to 839.
Katie
Sharar, spokesperson for the Kino initiative, said the new center will have 170
beds for “several thousand” immigrants in Nogales.
Since the
Trump administration imposed the “Remain in Mexico” policy last fall, the flow
of asylum-seekers into the U.S. has been largely reduced.
Under the
policy, asylum-seekers must return or be returned to Mexico while their cases
goes through the courts. Those crossing into the U.S. at Nogales are detained
by Border Patrol, relocated to Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico, through El
Paso, Texas. They eventually work their way back to Nogales for their court
dates.
Last
spring the seemingly endless flow of asylum-seekers led agencies such as
Catholic Community Services’ Casa Alitas in Tucson to open a new and expanded
shelter in a former juvenile detention center to accommodate detainees in the
U.S.
Sharar
said that previous flow of immigrants has virtually stopped.
Meanwhile,
Mexican border cities, like Nogales, deal with the crises of growing numbers of
refugees.
At the
opening celebration for the Migrant Outreach Center, Bishop Gonzalez noted that
when he was named as the first bishop of Nogales, he stopped at the comedor on
the day he was appointed.
He
thanked the media who were present and who have reported on the Kino Border
Initiative over the years. “It is because of the media that this work can be
known in all of Mexico and all of the United States.”
Msgr.
Raul Trevizo, vicar for Hispanics in the Tucson Diocese, who also is pastor of
St. John the Evangelist un Tucson, started his comments by pointing out the
flowers around the face and the heart of a nearby image of Our Lady of
Guadalupe.
“The face
and the heart together combine to reveal who the person is,” he said. “Policies
on both sides of the border want to hide the faces and the hearts (of
migrants). People are afraid that if we see them, it will change our hearts.”
He
recounted the story of a good friend who was a supporter of U.S. border policy.
Msgr. Trevizo challenged his friend to visit Casa Alitas with him and to see
the faces of the people affected by that policy.
“We were
there for five minutes and he saw the children’s faces and the women there
nursing their children,” the monsignor recalled.
“My
friend is a very big man, and he started to scream. He said, ‘Why doesn’t
someone bring President Trump here so he can see the faces of the people so he
can change his mind?’”
Msgr.
Trevizo thanked the supporters in the room: “You make us see their faces and
their hearts.” He added, “The heart of Jesus is at the center of the work of
KBI.”
“I see
the tragedies that are unfolding all over the world,” said another speaker,
Joan Rosenhauer, executive director of Jesuit Refugee Service USA. “What keeps
me up at night is the children.” She said she was buoyed to be in “a room full
of people who have not ignored the crisis at the border.”
The Kino
Border Initiative and the new facility “are a model on how migrants should be
treated as a people,” Rosenhauer said. “It’s really important that all of you
bring this message to others.”
Fr.
Prisciliano Peraza, from Altar in Sonora, Mexico, and a supporter of the Kino
initiative from the beginning, recalled the meeting he had with Fr. Carroll and
Bishop Kicanas, to float the idea of the cross-border effort.
“People
thought it was crazy,” Fr. Peraza said. “Bishop Kicanas listened, and he
accepted it, and that’s how we were able to begin this work 15 years ago.”
“This is
such a large building,” he started, adding quickly, “yet, today this space is
inadequate for the need.”
He also
reached out to thank those who are being served there. “Thank you to our
brother and sister migrants. You have helped us to become better people.”
Sr. Diana
Lorena Rubio, a member of the Missionaries of the Eucharist, said the Kino
Border Initiative mission was to “be similar to Jesus, who doesn’t judge us, Who
doesn’t have prejudice, but Who welcomes people in need.”
The
Missionaries of the Eucharist have staffed the comedor and other Kino relief
efforts for years.
— By
Michael Brown, Catholic News Service. Brown in managing editor of Catholic
Outlook, the newspaper of the Diocese of Tucson.