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Catholic Archdiocese will help family facing deportation

AUGUST 2, 2015 LILBURN Claudia Mariela Jurado is shown with her children, Katherin, 5 and Josue, 1, in their sleeping quarters above the sanctuary of Our Lady of the Americas Catholic Mission in Lilburn, Sunday, August 2, 2015. Jurado, a pregnant El Salvadorian woman who has been ordered deported for illegally entering the U.S., has fled to an Atlanta-area Catholic mission, where she is seeking sanctuary with her two young children. Jurado recently cut off the electronic monitoring bracelet immigration authorities had attached to her ankle. She absconded after she was asked to report to them Friday for her removal. Now living in a converted office at Our Lady of the Americas Catholic Mission in Lilburn, Jurado said she left El Salvador because a gang extorted money from her there. A Catholic, she said she will stay at the mission until “God decides” otherwise. “I’m afraid for my life,” she said through an interpreter Sunday about the possibility of returning to her native country. KENT D. JOHNSON /KDJOHNSON@AJC.COM
AUGUST 2, 2015 LILBURN Claudia Mariela Jurado is shown with her children, Katherin, 5 and Josue, 1, in their sleeping quarters above the sanctuary of Our Lady of the Americas Catholic Mission in Lilburn, Sunday, August 2, 2015. Jurado, a pregnant El Salvadorian woman who has been ordered deported for illegally entering the U.S., has fled to an Atlanta-area Catholic mission, where she is seeking sanctuary with her two young children. Jurado recently cut off the electronic monitoring bracelet immigration authorities had attached to her ankle. She absconded after she was asked to report to them Friday for her removal. Now living in a converted office at Our Lady of the Americas Catholic Mission in Lilburn, Jurado said she left El Salvador because a gang extorted money from her there. A Catholic, she said she will stay at the mission until “God decides” otherwise. “I’m afraid for my life,” she said through an interpreter Sunday about the possibility of returning to her native country. KENT D. JOHNSON /KDJOHNSON@AJC.COM
Aug 4, 2015

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta on Tuesday said a Catholic mission in Lilburn will help a pregnant El Salvadorian woman seeking sanctuary there but will “not be a long-term solution.”

Claudia Mariela Jurado fled to the Our Lady of the Americas Catholic Mission with her two young children Friday after federal immigration authorities requested she appear in Atlanta to be deported for illegally entering the country. Using a pair of garden shears, she recently cut off the electronic monitoring bracelet immigration authorities had attached to her ankle. Now living in a converted office at the mission, Jurado said she left El Salvador because a gang extorted money from her there.

“To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time someone has attempted to claim sanctuary in one of our Catholic churches,” Paula Gwynn Grant, a spokeswoman for the archdiocese, said in a prepared statement Tuesday afternoon. “Our Lady of the Americas Mission will provide assistance to the extent that the law and their very limited resources allow, mindful that the mission is not a long-term solution.”

Grant added Catholic teaching “has long supported the principle that every person has the right to live in his or her homeland in security and dignity with opportunities for work.”

“Yet, when the loss of these rights compels individuals to migrate to other lands, we should welcome them, protect them and generously share our bounty with them,” Grant said. “Based on scriptural and Catholic social teachings, as well as her own experience as an immigrant church in the United States, the Catholic Church is compelled to raise her voice on behalf of those who are marginalized.”

“The Catholic Church continues to advocate for reform of current immigration law,” Grant continued. “We recommend immigrants seek legal counsel to see if they have means to stay in the U.S. and/or to seek asylum under current immigration law. The U.S. Catholic Bishops do not condone unlawful entry or circumventions of our nation’s immigration laws.”

About the Author

Jeremy Redmon is an award-winning journalist, essayist and educator with more than three decades of experience reporting for newspapers. He has written for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution since 2005.

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