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September 19, 2017, Adrian, Michigan – City of Adrian Commissioners spoke loud and clear during their meeting September 18, passing by a vote of 6-1 a resolution showing support for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and the Dreamers – the young immigrants who are affected.  

Initiated by President Barack Obama in 2012, DACA offered a delay in deportation of immigrants who had come into the United States as children with their parents but without official papers. The program offers protection to more than 800,000 young people who arrived in the United States at an early age – many of whom have known this country as home. In early September, the Trump administration announced the program would phase out in six months.

The termination of DACA is “cruel and deeply unfair to hundreds of thousands of young people who are citizens of this country in every way except on paper,” the Adrian City Commission’s resolution states. “Deporting the Dreamers to countries they have no ties to and may not even remember is a travesty of justice.” The resolution calls on Congress to “act immediately to pass the Dream Act and to use the next six months to work on comprehensive immigration reform.” The resolution will be presented to U.S. Representative Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) and Senators Debbie Stabinow and Gary Peters, both Democrats from Michigan.

Mayor Jim Berryman presented the proposal, opening the floor to comments. The first to speak was Sister Attracta Kelly, OP, Director of the Congregation’s Immigration Assistance Office. An immigration attorney, Sister Attracta “laid out the background, explained the 20-year failure of Congress to come up with immigration reform, and expressed the need to support this resolution,” Sister Lorraine Réaume, OP, Director of Formation, wrote in an email reporting on the event to Adrian Dominican Sisters, Associates, and Co-workers. The six speakers who followed Sister Attracta all spoke in favor of the resolution, Sister Lorraine noted. 

Others with ties to the Adrian Dominican Sisters who attended the meeting in solidarity with the Dreamers were Sister Tarianne DeYonker, OP, and Elaine Johnson, a Co-worker in the Congregation’s Permaculture Office.

In her report, Sister Lorraine noted a profound insight she gained from Laura Parra, of the local Sunnyside Center for Peace and Justice. She said that, while politicians might expect such resolutions from large cities, “a message like this from a small Midwestern city is not expected and could have a bigger impact!”

Adrian Dominican Sisters have long supported DACA, Dreamers, and a just immigration system. In response to President Trump’s decision to phase out DACA, the General Council issued a statement, grieving for the “pain and hardship” that the action would cause Dreamers and their families and decrying the President’s decision, which “runs counter to our national and economic interests, as well as to the basic American values of decency in how we treat others, especially the young.”  Several Adrian Dominican Sisters were among a group who gathered at the Adrian Courthouse shortly after President Trump’s decision to show their support for the Dreamers.

Sisters and Associates in the Dominican Midwest Mission Chapter, based in Chicago, have acted on their Chapter Initiative on Immigration. Through the initiative, they support immigrants and immigration reform through prayer, advocacy on behalf of immigrants, weekly prayer vigils at a deportation center in Chicago, and volunteer ministry at immigration courts and shelters for immigrants. The Congregation’s seven literacy centers work directly with immigrants, helping them to learn English as a second language and gain other skills.

 

Feature photo: In this file photo from 2013, Sister Attracta Kelly, OP, then Prioress of the Adrian Dominican Congregation, blesses a banner proclaiming the Congregation’s stance in favor of just immigration reform. Sister Attracta is now Director of the Adrian Dominican Sisters Immigration Assistance Office.


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September 18, 2017, West Palm Beach, Florida – Like other residents of Florida in the past week, Adrian Dominican Sisters experienced the agony of waiting, the busy-ness of preparations, fear, evacuation, traffic jams, gasoline shortages, and the willingness to reach out to others suffering from the ravages of Hurricane Irma. Adrian Dominican Sisters Mary Jean Clemenger, OP, Patricia Erickson, OP, Margaret Exworthy, OP, Grace Flowers, OP, Mary Therese Napolitan, OP, and Judy Rimbey, OP, reported on their experiences to Dan Stockman, of Global Sisters Report. Read the article.

To help in the disaster relief efforts for people impacted by Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, please consider making a donation to Catholic Charities USA (CCUSA), “the official domestic disaster relief agency of the U.S. Church.” Access CCUSA’s online disaster relief donation page.


 

 

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