The Sanctuary Movement

Sergio González
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Abstract

In the spring of 1982, six faith communities in Arizona and California declared themselves places of safe harbor for the hundreds of thousands of Salvadorans and Guatemalans that had been denied legal proceedings for political asylum in the United States. Alleging that immigration officials had intentionally miscategorized Central Americans as “economic migrants” in order to accelerate their deportation, humanitarian organizations, legal advocates, and religious bodies sought alternatives for aid within their faiths’ scriptural teachings and the juridical parameters offered by international and national human rights and refugee law. Known as the sanctuary movement, this decade-long interfaith mobilization of lay and clerical activists indicted the US detention and deportation system and the country’s foreign policy initiatives in Latin America as morally bankrupt while arguing that human lives, regardless of documentation status, were sacred. In accusing the United States of being a violator of both domestic and international refugee legislation, subsequently exposing hundreds of thousands of people to persecution, torture, and death, the movement tested the idea that the country had always extended welcome to victims of persecution. Along with a broad network of anti-interventionist and humanitarian aid organizations, sanctuary galvanized more than 60,000 participants in 500 faith communities across the nation. By the 1990s, the movement had spurred congressional action in support of Central American asylees and served as the model for a renewed movement for sanctuary in support of undocumented Americans in the 21st century.
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庇护运动
1982年春,亚利桑那州和加利福尼亚州的六个宗教团体宣布自己是数十万萨尔瓦多人和危地马拉人的安全港,这些人在美国申请政治庇护的法律程序被拒绝。人道主义组织、法律倡导者和宗教团体声称移民官员故意错误地将中美洲人归类为“经济移民”,以便加速将他们驱逐出境,因此在其信仰的圣经教义以及国际和国家人权和难民法提供的司法参数范围内寻求其他援助。这场被称为“庇护运动”(sanctuary movement)的运动持续了10年,由世俗和宗教活动人士组成的跨宗教运动指责美国的拘留和驱逐制度以及美国在拉丁美洲的外交政策举措在道德上破产,同时辩称,无论文件身份如何,人的生命都是神圣的。该运动指责美国违反了国内和国际难民立法,随后使数十万人遭受迫害、酷刑和死亡,从而检验了美国一向欢迎迫害受害者的观念。与反干涉主义和人道主义援助组织组成的广泛网络一起,庇护所激励了全国500个信仰社区的6万多名参与者。到20世纪90年代,该运动促使国会采取行动,支持中美洲的庇护者,并成为21世纪支持无证美国人的新庇护运动的典范。
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