On December 26, 2024
Opinions

Let’s welcome asylum seekers

Dear Editor,

Picture a young woman, nine months pregnant, compelled by forces beyond her control to leave home and make an arduous journey with her betrothed to a foreign land, unsure of their welcome there.

At this time of year, most of us raised in the Christian tradition would pretty immediately, if unconsciously, imagine this young woman as Mary, “heavy with child,” compelled by a decree by Roman ruler Caesar Augustus to travel with Joseph to Bethlehem, to be counted in a compulsory census. Given the secularization of the Nativity story, even people of other faiths–or no faith at all–know Jesus’s birth story, if only through secular sources like Linus standing in the spotlight on stage to recite the story in the animated classic, “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”

But what if this story is not Biblical at all but contemporary? In fact, this story is that of one of the asylum seekers who came to Vermont just a few years ago with her husband. She walked through the treacherous jungle of the Darien Gap that links South America to Central America and on to the US-Mexico border, all while many months pregnant, to seek asylum from the violence and hopelessness of her native land. And what if you knew that this woman’s story, unlike Mary’s, is not at all unique, but far too familiar, and one that at times has resulted in the death of the mother and her unborn child, either due to the terrible conditions of the journey or her treatment at the border?

Since 2018, the nine community-based organizations that comprise the Vermont-New Hampshire Asylum Support Network members have organized in their backyards to welcome strangers like this pregnant woman and her husband. Residents of Vermont towns from Brattleboro to Burlington and St. Johnsbury to Rutland have banded together to provide asylum seekers with safe and warm places to stay and other assistance when little else is available.

Stories of welcoming strangers are not confined to one or another country or culture. Indeed, admonitions to welcome the stranger with extravagant hospitality abound in societies around the globe and across time lest the stranger turn out to be a friend—or perhaps an angel, an ancestor, or even a Savior!

One reason the value of welcoming the stranger has such universal power may be that so many of us—perhaps most of us—have at one time or another been “a stranger in a strange land.” Indeed, most Vermonters have ancestors who came to the United States at some point over the past three centuries, looking for safety, opportunity, and the freedom to pursue their dreams. The asylum seekers coming to Vermont right now are no different from our ancestors. They seek protection for themselves and their children. They yearn for the chance to live free of the threat of violence or persecution for who they are, the color of their skin, their religious beliefs, or their political perspective. They are ready to work hard, contribute to their communities, and live in peace with their neighbors.

In other words, they are just like the rest of us.

We in the VT-NH ASN groups around Vermont ask that each of us remember our own family’s “Coming to America” story and greet the newest immigrants to our country—whether refugee, asylum seeker, migrant worker, or some other designation—with generosity of spirit and the understanding that we–or someone in our background—were also strangers here once, too.

The Vermont-New Hampshire-Asylum Support Network

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Vermont’s public safety and recovery need adaptation

April 16, 2025
By Jenney Samuelson, secretary Agency of Human Services Vermont has long been a leader in treatment for addiction and substance use, particularly through its Hub and Spoke model, launched nearly a decade ago to address the opioid epidemic. This approach brought treatment into mainstream, integrating into doctor’s offices and expanding access to services through regional…

The state of maple

April 16, 2025
By Anson Tebbetts, Vermont Agriculture Secretary By the end of the month, we’ll have a clearer picture of how Vermont’s sugar makers view this season. How was the yield? What will prices look like? Where will the markets be? In June, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will release the official results of its annual…

We moved to Vermont to escape Florida’s schools

April 16, 2025
Dear Editor, If you’re wondering what Gov. Phil Scott and Sec. Zoie Saunder’s education plan will be like in practice, I can tell you­— our family lived through it in Florida. My family relocated to Vermont from Florida just a couple of months after Saunders and her family. Unlike Saunders, we moved to Vermont to escape Florida’s…

In support of Woodstock police chief

April 16, 2025
Dear Editor, We moved to Woodstock, Vermont, in early 2017. It was the first time we had spent any time in Vermont, and we fell in love. We loved the town, the community, and everything else. We opened a business, and one of the first people we met was then officer Joe Swanson. He was…