SUPPORT FOR COMPREHENSIVE IMMIGRATION REFORM
Resolution adopted by the N.C. Council of Churches Executive Board
December 5, 2006
PREFACE
As people of faith and conscience, we recognize that while the
issue of immigration is complex, our calling is to welcome the stranger and
offer hospitality and justice to the migrant and refugee, regardless of legal
status. We remember the words of Leviticus 19:33-34 when God tells the
Israelites,
“Do not mistreat
foreigners living in your land, but treat them just as you treat your own
citizens. Love foreigners as you love yourselves, because you were foreigners
one time in Egypt.”
As
nearly all citizens in the United States today are descended
from immigrants from other nations, we are reminded to offer support to newer
immigrants who contribute to our economy and culture but who suffer
discrimination, abuse, and hardship as a result of their status as undocumented
residents.
Our country’s current immigration system is broken. The
number of undocumented persons living in the United States has tripled since
1990 from 4 to 12 million, with 300,000 to 500,000 new arrivals each year.
During that same time period, more than 2,700 migrants have died in the deserts
of the American Southwest. North Carolina has
experienced the fastest growth rate of Latinos in the nation, many of whom are
undocumented. Congressional debate on immigration reform has often focused on
piecemeal, enforcement-only policies that ignore the root causes of migration,
keep families separated, and contribute to human suffering. The current political debate also has spawned
an increase in anti-immigrant emotion and alarming rhetoric.
It is important that the religious community respond to the
immigration crisis by offering advocacy and welcome in the face of rising
anti-immigrant sentiment. Religious communities must also look to our scripture
and faith traditions which call us to welcome the stranger, promote
hospitality, and seek justice. Congregations should call for legislative
reforms which are fair, humane, and address the root causes of migration. Many
denominations and religious groups, including member bodies of the North
Carolina Council of Churches, have issued statements and resolutions calling
for a comprehensive immigration reform that includes the following components:
- The
status of undocumented persons currently living in the U.S. must
be addressed. Undocumented workers and their families must have reasonable
access to paths for permanent residency. Immigration proposals which
ignore or criminalize the 12 million undocumented persons in our midst do not
account for the reality that these people are here as part of the work
force. Treating them as criminals only drives them further
underground. Bringing them out of the shadows is a better solution.
- Immigration
reform must be through employment and family-based programs that allow
workers and their families to enter the U.S. in a safe, legal,
orderly, and humane manner. Workers’ rights must be recognized and should
include basic rights to organize and collectively bargain,
safe travel between the U.S.
and homelands, and achievable paths to residency. Immigration reform
should bring a greater share of the immigration flow through legal
channels in response to recognized U.S. labor needs.
- Family
unity and reunification should be given paramount importance. Our current
laws are out-of-date. The wait times for close family members to reunite
have stretched into many years, leaving families needlessly separated and
often attempting illegal and dangerous ways to enter the United States.
More legal channels should be available for those coming here to join
close family members without undue delay.
- Although
the U.S.
has the right to control its borders, border enforcement alone should not
be the basis for a solution to the immigration crisis, and border
enforcement policies must be proportional and humane.
- Fundamental
U.S.
principles of legal due process should be granted to all persons.
- Comprehensive
immigration reform must also address root causes for migration to the United States
from other countries. This means promoting national policies that support
fair trade, sustainable economic development in home countries, and
protection of low-skilled workers and those fleeing persecution and
violence.
RESOLUTION
WHEREAS the God
of scripture calls us to welcome the stranger from an alien land and offer
hospitality and justice to the sojourner; and
WHEREAS Jesus
abolished distinctions between Jews and outsiders and declared that those who
welcomed strangers welcomed the Christ; and
WHEREAS the North
Carolina Council of Churches has a long history of advocacy on behalf of farm
workers and low wage laborers and has consistently supported North Carolina’s
oppressed and excluded populations in struggles for equality, dignity, and
basic human rights; and
WHEREAS North Carolina has
experienced the largest percentage increase in its Latino population from 1990
to 2000 of any state in the country and whereas many of those persons are
undocumented immigrants; and
WHEREAS there has been a large increase in the
diversity of North Carolina’s
immigrant population from around the world; and
WHEREAS the
current legal immigration system at the federal, state and local levels is
broken and contributes to the human suffering of migrants and their families,
THEREFORE be it
resolved that the Executive Board of the North Carolina Council of Churches,
acknowledging similar positions taken by its member judicatories, encourages
the U.S. government to enact comprehensive immigration reform that includes
reasonable pathways to permanent residency; increased legal avenues for workers
to enter the United States in a safe and orderly fashion; reunification without
undue delay of families separated by migration; effective, proportional and
humane enforcement of national borders and immigration policies; the right of
due process for immigrants; and policies which address the root causes of
migration.
BE IT FURTHER
RESOLVED that the Executive Board of the North Carolina Council of Churches
deplores any governmental action which unduly emphasizes enforcement as the
primary response to immigrants entering this country or which criminalizes
persons providing humanitarian assistance to migrants. In addition, we
encourage the state and local governments of North Carolina to provide for fair treatment
and protection of our state’s immigrant population. We call on our member
judicatories and congregations to stand with immigrants as a matter of
Christian responsibility, to advocate for their well-being and protection, and
to educate our members about issues affecting immigrant peoples.