Providing Sanctuary: A Forum – More Information

Sponsored by the Peace and Social Concerns and Adult Spiritual Education Committees of the Richmond Friends Meeting (Quakers)

WHEN: Sunday, April 30th, 12:30 PM

WHERE: Richmond Friends Meeting, Community Room 4500 Kensington Avenue, Richmond (Please park on Commonwealth Avenue)

FORUM PARTICIPANTS:

1) Linda Rabben, PhD.., author, and anthropologist who has written several books including Give Refuge to the Stranger: the Past, Present and Future of Sanctuary” and Sanctuary and Asylum.; attender at Adelphi Friends Meeting.

2) Lana Heath de Martinez, (M. Div, Union Theological Seminary), “Welcoming All Coordinator” from Virginia Interfaith Center (VICPP), Legislative Coordinator for Virginia Coalition of Latin American Organizations (Vacolao) during 2017 General Assembly. Lana is supporting/facilitating efforts of the VICPP Circles of Protection Sanctuary Network – Central Virginia.

3) Jennifer L. West, J.D., from UNC School of Law, Immigration & Nationality Attorney at Law Offices of Hyder and Overas, Richmond, Va, since 2002, member American Immigration Lawyers Association.

This forum will focus on:

**a history of the Sanctuary movement, specifically sanctuary provided by congregations and individuals, including the more recent Sanctuary movement of the past decade;

**information about ICE detentions in the Richmond area in recent years and under the current administration; Circles of Protection Sanctuary Network (VICPP)

**support and care for the vulnerable, undocumented, immigrants who have been detained or deported and their families; Power-of-Attorney clinics;

**and the legal aspects of providing Sanctuary as a congregation and/or an individual Faith communities have been mobilizing around the Sanctuary Movement and have been considering how best to protect, care for, and be allies with the undocumented, detained immigrants, and the families and loved ones of those deported.

Additional information: contact Sally Gudas at seatide1@gmail.com, (804)399-8342.

Finger foods, snacks, and drinks will be provided.

Educational Forum on Sanctuary

The RFM Peace and Social Concerns Committee is aware that the current U.S. administration is going forward with plans to increase the number of deportations of the undocumented and expand the scope of these deportations. Our Quaker testimonies of equality, community, and integrity cause us to hold in the Light the impact on the undocumented immigrant community of an unjust immigration system that harms people’s human and civil rights and tears families apart, and children from parents.

At our March P&SC Meeting, we had a brief presentation on the topic of Sanctuary by Lana Heath de Martinez, staff member of the Virginia Interfaith Center (VICPP). Lana is supporting/facilitating efforts of congregations throughout the State of Virginia as they learn about how to provide Sanctuary to these undocumented immigrants facing deportation.

To further educate ourselves and the Meeting about the needs of the immigrant community and all the aspects of Sanctuary, the Peace & Social Concerns Committee is co-sponsoring with Adult Spiritual Education an Educational Forum about Sanctuary to be held April 30th, at the Rise of Meeting in the community room. Light finger food, snacks, and drinks will be provided. We have invited the following participants to date:

  • 1)  Linda Rabben, PhD., attender at Adelphi Friends Meeting , author, and anthropologist who has written several books including “Give Refuge to the Stranger: the Past, Present and Future of Sanctuary” and “Sanctuary and Asylum”. Dr. Rabben conducts presentations about Sanctuary.
  • 2)  Lana Heath de Martinez, (M. Div, Union Theological Seminary) and Welcoming All Coordinator from Virginia Interfaith Center (VICPP)
  • 3)  Immigration Attorney (name not yet confirmed).

Sanctuary – brief history:

The practice of Sanctuary has a long history as a tradition of religious communities during situations of human despair. From the ancient Hebrew communities, the Christian churches of the late Roman Empire, to the church of England in the late medieval period, churches provided refuge to those fleeing governmental punishments for a variety of reasons. In the US, the first time that a practice surfaced similar to sanctuary was the Underground Railroad that developed to help slaves flee their masters in the South and find safety in homes and congregations far away.

In the early 1970s, again church communities provided sanctuary within their churches to conscientious objectors who had been drafted to the War in Vietnam.

In the 1980s, refugees fled from Civil Wars in Central America to the US, but the US did not recognize them as political refugees seeking asylum. The Sanctuary Movement protected some of these refugees while protesting this practice with the US government; at the time, the US was directly supporting the Central American dictators and death squads. The Sanctuary Movement’s efforts at the time resulted in including Central Americans in US asylum laws in the 1986 immigration reform law.

Neighborhood raids by Immigration enforcement in the US escalated beginning in 2006 and the New Sanctuary Movement evolved from coalitions of congregations in major cities throughout the US.

The Sanctuary Movement Today

Under the Obama Administration rising rates of deportation continued and congregations recommitted themselves to Sanctuary.

Before the November 2016 presidential election there were approximately 400 congregations engaged in the work of sanctuary across the nation — since the election that number has doubled as communities of faith across the nation, due to concerns that the number and scope of deportations is being greatly expanded.

Upcoming Adult Spiritual Education Opportunities

Bible Workbench, led by Leslie Shiel, meets every first Sunday in one of the upstairs classrooms at 9:30 am. All are welcome.

The Friendly Bible Study group meets every third Sunday in classroom #1 (next to the library) at 9:45 am. All are welcome.

Sunday, February 26, 9:30 am

Living the Quaker Life: Quakers, the Lenten Season, and Easter

As they did prior to the Christmas holidays, Barbara Myers and Howard Garner will facilitate a discussion of Quaker history and values and Lent that is celebrated by Catholics as well as an increasing number of Protestants. Participants will be have the opportunity to share their own experiences and family Easter traditions and explore how their Quaker testimonies are lived during this season of the year.

 Sunday, March 5, at the rise of meeting. A light snack will be provided.

Bringing Richmond into the Transition Vision

Our guest presenter will be Ruah Swennerfelt of Burlington, Vermont Friends Meeting. She will share her involvement in the worldwide Transition Town Movement and describe her visits to Transition communities and forward-looking permaculture projects across the U.S., Europe, Brazil, and Israel/Palestine. Her talk will speak to anyone who wants to create resilient communities, who is searching for ways to engage in local grassroots work, and who is needing a reason for hope.

Sunday, March 26, at 9:30 am

The Quaker Split: When Breaking-Up is Hard to Do

Quakers are known for their peace testimony and for valuing a decision making process that keeps them in unity. As you may know, this has not always been our history. This sessions, led by Rita Willett and Barbara Myers, will give you new insights into the divisions and splits that are a part of our past and explore how they are experienced in our world today.

Scholarships, up to $400, are available to support members of the Richmond Friends community who wish to participate in Quaker-related workshops and conferences. See the website for more details and how to apply.

Friendly Bible Study

In addition to the monthly Bible Workbench, Bible Study takes place each month on the 3rd Sunday at 9:45–10:45, using these questions from the Friends General Conference pamphlet Friendly Bible Study: What is the author’s main point in the passage? What new light do I find in this reading of the text? Is the passage true to my experience? What are the implications of the passage for my life? What problems do I have with the passage?

We meet in classroom #1 (next to the library). The meeting newslist publishes the passages for each month’s study.

A Friendly Reminder from Adult Spiritual Education

This coming Sunday, January 15, 2017 at 9:30 am in the Community Roomplease join us for this important session on Earthcare Witness. This is the session that was cancelled last week due to the snowstorm.

Barb Adams is our Meeting’s representative to Quaker Earthcare Witness, and in this session she will help us explore our intimate relationship with the earth. Through interactive experiences, personal discussion, and sharing, we will examine our emotional connection to our planet and the larger cosmos. Barb will guide us in using our own experiences of nature to understand the vital importance of living within the earth’s carrying capacity. Barb will bring some essence of Joanna Macy’s teachings from her presentations at this year’s Friends Conference on Religion and Psychology.