MCC Photo by Saulo Padilla

In Guatemala, MCC is providing comforters, blankets, and hygiene kits and funding to a home run by Missionaries of Saint Charles Scalabrinians, which provides temporary shelter to migrants such as Nanci Adair Galiano Lemus, 13, and, in the background, Yordani Galguera Vasquez, 28. 

AKRON, Pa. – In a year when the flow of Central American families to the U.S. border has made headlines, Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) is responding broadly.

“This is continuing our invitation to welcome the stranger, to open our hearts – and to see the image of God in all who are coming and to receive them,” said Saulo Padilla, MCC U.S. immigration education coordinator.

While the unprecedented number of families and children fleeing violence and poverty in Central America and arriving at the U.S. border has slowed, the MCC U.S. Washington Office notes that the Obama administration is opening new family detention centres and quickly deporting women and children, often back to the dangerous situations from which they fled.

Given that reality, “our response goes not just as far as the border, but it goes south to the other countries as well,” Padilla stressed.

The largest effort funded at this point is a U.S. $20,000 project with the Honduran Mennonite Social Action Committee, which will provide emergency food, shelter and counselling to some 110 children and youth who have been deported back to Honduras from the U.S. and do not have family members awaiting them. Sometimes children need care for a few days until relatives arrive from rural areas, but in other cases no family can be found and children need care for longer periods.

In Guatemala, MCC comforters and blankets and hygiene kits will help meet needs at a home run by Missionaries of Saint Charles Scalabrinians. MCC will provide U.S. $5,000 to purchase bedding, medicines, first aid and cleaning supplies for the home, which provides temporary shelter for migrant men, women and children.

MCC also is supporting a U.S. $5,000 project through a long-time partner in El Salvador, New Dawn Association (ANADES), to raise awareness in some 10 communities about the process of migrating to the United States.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., the numbers of unaccompanied minors crossing the border is declining, but legal proceedings are accelerating for the tens of thousands of children who were detained and released to family or friend sponsors. That’s placing a severe strain on already-stretched non-profits and attorneys providing free or low-cost services to migrants.

MCC is providing U.S. $10,000 through the Cabrini Center in Houston and another U.S. $5,000 through the Florence Project in Phoenix, Ariz., to help cover costs of processing the cases of children and youth detained on immigration charges.