Last month, World Relief nearly doubled the
number of refugees it resettles in the United States in a typical month. In the
past 12 months, the evangelical agency handled a caseload of 9,759 refugees—its
largest total since 1999.
“The task set before us last month was nothing
short of monumental,” stated president Scott Arbeiter. “But the work our
dedicated staff and volunteers have accomplished has been equally impressive.”
The milestone comes at the same time as major
setbacks to the effort to ban Syrian refugee resettlement in Indiana and Texas.
Earlier this month, a federal appeals court
found the Syrian refugee ban by Indiana governor and GOP vice presidential
nominee Mike Pence was based on a “nightmare scenario” of Syrian terrorists
posing as refugees to gain US entry. “No evidence of this belief has been
presented,” wrote judge Richard Posner of the Seventh
Circuit Court of Appeals.
Four days later, Texas’s attorney general
dropped the state’s appeal of a federal court decision, preventing Texas from
banning resettlement of refugees from Syria inside state borders.
Through its 26 offices and its local church
networks, World Relief resettled 1,400 refugees in September. The agency
supports federal plans to increase the rate of resettlement of refugees by
nearly 30 percent next year.
“[We are] prepared to continue meeting the
increased need into the next year by providing resettlement assistance to some
of the world’s most vulnerable people,” Arbeiter stated.
The Obama administration’s 2017 plan calls for
the resettlement of 110,000 refugees—including 13,000 Syrians—across all 50
states. The 1980 Refugee Act authorizes the president to set this annual goal.
World Relief is one of nine agencies approved
for refugee resettlement. It partnered with 1,180 congregations this year to
assist refugees.
“It’s a counter-cultural moment for the church.
How could we sit out the greatest refugee crisis in history and still say that
we love our neighbor?” Ed Stetzer told CT. In January, Stetzer helped to
convene the GC2 summit, a new pro-refugee collaboration among evangelicals.
Stetzer said Christians should participate in
the debates over vetting refugees and other issues. “And while debate goes on,
the church abides by another policy—the one Jesus gave when he said, ‘Do to
others as you would want them to do to you.’”
“We are hoping that Congress and states will
embrace this, but we are seeing the opposite,” World Relief vice president for
advocacy and policy Jenny Yang told CT.
Many who resist refugee resettlement are worried about terrorists posing as refugees.
But recent research by the libertarian Cato Institute found that “the chance of an American being
murdered in a terrorist attack caused by a refugee is 1 in 3.64 billion per
year.”
Resettlement critics also base their opposition
on the health risk of resettled refugees who might carry tuberculosis and HIV,
and on the burden placed on local government as refugees exhaust federal
benefits.
“Texas recently decided to pull out of the
refugee resettlement programs, as did Kansas and Idaho,” Yang said. “The House
of Representatives also recently had language in one of their bills to limit
funding to only 70,000 refugees.”
This fall, Church World Service (CWS) called for
much more ambitious goals for resettlement. “Anything short of a steadfast US
commitment of admitting 200,000 refugees over the next fiscal year would betray
the White House’s own call to redouble global resettlement efforts,” said CWS,
which represents 37 Christian groups, in a statement.
According to the Pew
Research Center, just under 85,000 refugees were resettled in the US by
September 30, the end of the 2016 federal fiscal year.
More Muslim refugees (38,901) were admitted in
2016 than in any other year since the government started to release religious
affiliations in 2002. By comparison, admission of Christians dipped to 37,521
in 2016, slightly below the 2015 total.
“During the past 15 years, the US has admitted
399,677 Christian refugees and 279,339 Muslim refugees, meaning that 46 percent
of all refugees who have entered the US during this time have been Christian while 32 percent have been
Muslim,” Pew stated.
CT has reported on why Syrian refugees are more
Muslim than Christian, whether the Paris terrorist attack affected
American attitudes toward
asylum seekers, and how many pastors report that their congregation is fearful
of refugees coming to the
United States.
CT also visited eight refugee camps in Iraq and
Greece to learn why evangelicals on the front lines of the refugee crisis still
have hope.
Who created these crisis? The UN & NATO This is the "Sustainable Development" to make the world without borders!!!
ReplyDeleteIt is not the Syrian Civil War, but is a globalist war on who get the most profits from natural resources in oil and gas in that region flowing into Europe and China.
Meanwhile some Cambodians are shipped back to Cambodia to make room for all these middle east refugees. Where is the money coming from? I venture to say these refugees will be more better off than I am as hard working half-american. The CEO of these churches will be enriched by the money dished out to them from the federal government.
World without border integration in progress!!!!!!!!!