日韩色综合-日韩色中色-日韩色在线-日韩色哟哟-国产ts在线视频-国产suv精品一区二区69

手機APP下載

您現在的位置: 首頁 > 在線廣播 > PBS高端訪談 > PBS訪談社會系列 > 正文

PBS高端訪談:越來越多的教會為無證移民敞開大門

來源:可可英語 編輯:kelly ?  可可英語APP下載 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
  


掃描二維碼可進行跟讀訓練
  下載MP3到電腦  [F8鍵暫停/播放]   批量下載MP3到手機
^6q5xu,DMiqC)]d1(

qb5h8^N2D8,c8QvB=

Judy Woodruff: But first, throughout his campaign for office, President Trump made halting illegal immigration and building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border a central theme. Now, nearly a year since he was inaugurated, Immigration and Customs Enforcement says that arrests are up roughly 40 percent. But the president's policy has also inspired a renewed resistance. Special correspondent Duarte Geraldino reports from North Carolina on churches offering sanctuary to undocumented immigrants.

Duarte Geraldino: The doors of Umstead Park Church of Christ are unlocked, but Eliseo Jimenez is trapped within its walls. The 39-year-old is an undocumented immigrant with a standing deportation order, meaning Immigration and Customs Enforcement want him returned to his native Mexico. But he's not going.

Eliseo Jimenez: I'm not going to give up on my kids. I'm not going to take them away from their own country, take them away their rights to better education, better health care, better life.

Duarte Geraldino: Instead, he's chosen sanctuary in this church, relying on an ICE policy that says federal immigration agents won't apprehend people in so-called sensitive locations. It's part of a strategy to buy time to reopen his immigration case and to find a legal way to stay. Umstead Park United Church of Christ is one of a growing number of churches around the country that have publicly declared their opposition to existing U.S. immigration law by offering sanctuary to undocumented people facing deportation. Reverend Doug Long is the pastor here.

Rev. Doug Long: I want to be able to say to my grandchildren one day, maybe I didn't live during the height of slavery, maybe I didn't live through Nazi Germany, but when I had the opportunity, when we had the opportunity to offer refuge to a family in need, to an undocumented immigrant who was being deported, we did our best.

Duarte Geraldino: The sanctuary movement has its modern roots in the 1980s, when civil wars in Central America sent hundreds of thousands of political refugees into the U.S. seeking asylum. Church leaders sheltered them and were later prosecuted and convicted, though received no jail time. The movement was revived under President Obama, who critics called the deporter-in-chief for the record-high removals that happened under his watch. And since President Trump took office, the number of churches that have joined this movement, saying they're willing to shelter people or help do so, has grown from 400 to around 1,000.

Viridiana Martinez: The Trump effect is in new allies coming in, is in these churches stepping up like never before. That is the Trump effect.

PzJhVw28qLeFoEQtVY

基督教會

pZRxY%Evg=q

Duarte Geraldino: Viridiana Martinez is the founder of Alerta Migratoria, Migration Alert, a nonprofit started during 2016, when many recent arrivals from Central America were detained and deported.

Viridiana Martinez: You know, at this point, it's not just a moral human rights thing. It's also a Christian duty to uphold Christian values and to be there for the people that are most vulnerable.

Duarte Geraldino: Umstead Park began hosting Jimenez in October 2017, after first undergoing legal training in to learn how to offer sanctuary. Pastor Long says both he and his congregation had many questions.

Rev. Doug Long: Is this legal? And in what ways might it not be legal? How might we get in trouble with our 501(c)(3) status? Can we provide enough volunteers to maintain this kind of ministry? How much does it cost?

Duarte Geraldino: After talking to legal counsel and other churches in the area, the congregation voted overwhelmingly to welcome Jimenez, converting a former office into a studio apartment. On weekends, his children, Alison and Christopher, stay with him. They sleep in a tent, a small touch meant to make the ordeal feel like an adventure. A church volunteer stays on the grounds 24 hours a day, sleeping on a mattress in the pastor's office, just in case immigration agents show up. Jimenez attends services and helps out around the church to pass the time, while, back at his old home in Greensboro, about an hour's drive away, his partner, Gabriela, who's also undocumented, works 50 hours a week and struggles to take care of their children.

Gabriela Martinez: They don't really understand what's happening. But they get frustrated. They cry like almost every night and every morning. They ask me why his father is not at home. What I just tell them is like, he's working in the church.

Duarte Geraldino: Jimenez says he first came to the U.S. when he was 17. In 2007, he was deported back to Mexico, but reentered the United States a month later, a federal felony. He did it, he says, to care for his then young children, who are U.S. citizens.

Eliseo Jimenez: Give them whatever they need for school, for clothes, or anything they need. That's just like I'm doing right now with my kids.

Duarte Geraldino: In 2013, he was arrested for auto theft, but he calls the case a misunderstanding. He borrowed a roommate's car without telling him. Court records show most of the charges were dropped, but he pled guilty to driving with a revoked license and failing to notify the DMV of an address change. He paid a fine. And under the Obama administration, he wasn't considered a priority for deportation. He obtained a work permit, paid taxes and was checking in with ICE officials each year. That all changed in 2017, when President Trump signed an executive order broadening ICE criteria to include anyone convicted or charged with any crime, and generally giving ICE agents far more discretion in whom they target for removal.

Viridiana Martinez: People are checking in as they had been in previous years, and they're being told, you have to pack up your bags and go.

Duarte Geraldino: That rising demand and Trump's election appear to be fueling this growing sanctuary movement. And yet it still represents only a tiny fraction of the broader Christian community.

Rev.Russ Reaves: We are to be people of the law, Romans 13, be in submission to governing authorities, because we recognize that God has allowed those authorities to be there, and therefore are good.

Duarte Geraldino: Russ Reaves is the former pastor at this church in Greensboro.

Rev.Russ Reaves: Biblical justice. Perfect justice.

Duarte Geraldino: He says he's worked hard to welcome immigrants into his congregation. But providing sanctuary, he says, is a step too far. A number of years ago, he was asked to do so, but refused.

Rev.Russ Reaves: I would say that a church has every right, and should, reach out to see that, are there felt needs there that we can meet? Is there some way that we can help them gain access to the system that would perhaps make them able to stay?

Duarte Geraldino: Everything but actually offering them sanctuary.

Rev.Russ Reaves: Essentially, yes. The most important thing we can do is to share our faith with them and to ground them in their relationship with God, so that, worst-case scenario, they do get deported, they go back to where they're from with a sense of divine purpose for their life.

Duarte Geraldino: With more people like Eliseo facing deportation, and the demand for sanctuary growing, more churches will likely wrestle with this debate. Remember Viridiana Martinez? She came to the U.S. when she was 7. She received Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. And unless Congress acts, she too faces possible deportation this year. What about people like you?

Viridiana Martinez: I don't know. That's a good question to ask the American people. If this administration is really going to going to put their foot down and say, no, we're going to round all of you up, then I hope that we can have the support of churches, saying, we're going to open our doors to all of you.

Duarte Geraldino: More doors may be opening, but how long Eliseo Jimenez and others are willing to stay to avoid deportation is another matter. For the PBS NewsHour I'm Duarte Geraldino in Raleigh, North Carolina.

L~D@C)%KgvYVUis4-7ij

psdE^Ml&%v-J7e[QLUb|[8n%S5nAHdk8t8c)~gdhXqC

重點單詞   查看全部解釋    
resistance [ri'zistəns]

想一想再看

n. 抵抗力,反抗,反抗行動;阻力,電阻;反對

聯想記憶
shelter ['ʃeltə]

想一想再看

n. 庇護所,避難所,庇護
v. 庇護,保護,

聯想記憶
priority [prai'ɔriti]

想一想再看

n. 優先權,優先順序,優先

 
avoid [ə'vɔid]

想一想再看

vt. 避免,逃避

聯想記憶
permit ['pə:mit,pə'mit]

想一想再看

n. 許可證,執照
v. 允許,許可

聯想記憶
movement ['mu:vmənt]

想一想再看

n. 活動,運動,移動,[音]樂章

聯想記憶
executive [ig'zekjutiv]

想一想再看

adj. 行政的,決策的,經營的,[計算機]執行指令

 
election [i'lekʃən]

想一想再看

n. 選舉

聯想記憶
address [ə'dres]

想一想再看

n. 住址,致詞,講話,談吐,(處理問題的)技巧

 
essentially [i'senʃəli]

想一想再看

adv. 本質上,本來

 
?
發布評論我來說2句

    最新文章

    可可英語官方微信(微信號:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英語學習資料.

    添加方式1.掃描上方可可官方微信二維碼。
    添加方式2.搜索微信號ikekenet添加即可。
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 日本午夜电影| 王琳琳个人资料及简历| 大侠霍元甲演员表| 电视剧零下三十八度手机免费观看| 少年派2高清免费观看电视剧预告 成全免费观看高清电影大侦探 | jaud1接口接什么| 戏王之王演员表| 成龙电影大全 免费播放| 女用春情药什么好| 女儿的朋友4| 误杀2电影免费观看高清完整版| 部队换季保养广播稿| jif| 关于心情的词语| run on| 王牌御史| 可爱美女跳舞蹈视频| 发型男2024流行发型图片| 我的一级兄弟| 音乐僵尸演员表| 胖女人做爰全过程免费的视频| 2025八方来财微信头像| 秀人网小逗逗集免费观看| 邓为个人简历| 纵横四海 电影| 酒图片| 还珠格格演员表| 二年级上册数学试卷题全套| 科特·柯本| 夜半2点钟| 鲁迅电影| 挠vk| 邓紫飞| 天天操免费视频| 黑马配白马成功的视频| 黄电影网站| 变形金刚1原版免费观看| 羞羞的视频| squirting| 伦理<禁忌1| 天国遥遥|