"Therefore, love the ger*: for you were gerim in the land of Egypt."

-Deuteronomy 10:19

Most immigrants to the U.S. come seeking safety, freedom, and a better life, just as many of our families did. Jewish texts, history, traditions, and values compel us to welcome them with dignity and compassion.

But our country’s policies towards immigrants remain far from our shared vision. While the Trump Administration’s dangerous policies were blatantly rooted in racism, xenophobia, and white supremacy, President Biden has not made the improvements our communities have demanded.

The United States must follow international human rights law when it comes to asylum seekers, refugees, and immigrants. Our government must also recognize and redress the systemic racism that permeates our immigration system, discriminating against immigrants of color.

In the fight for true immigrant justice and relief, we need all hands on deck.

Our work includes:

  • Organizing clergy through our BIMA Campaign (Building Immigration Momentum & Action), encouraging rabbis and cantors to recognize how they can use their platform to change the narrative around immigration for the better
  • Human rights delegations to the southern border for clergy, with our partners at HIAS
  • Coalition work through the Interfaith Immigration Coalition
  • Working with the All In For Registry campaign to update our immigration laws to allow millions of longtime undocumented US residents a path to permanent legal status
  • Advocating to Congress and the federal government for a more humane immigration system that welcomes asylum seekers and refugees with dignity, provides legitimate pathways to citizenship for more of our neighbors, and reduces reliance on detention and deportation.

*In the Torah, the word "ger" refers to a person who came from elsewhere, but is now a long-term or permanent resident of their new community.

Partners:

CHIRLA Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights logo

Tell Congress: Update the Immigration Registry Law and Clear the Path to Legal Status for Millions!

This legislation would make 8 million undocumented immigrants who have been in the U.S. for longer than 7 years eligible for green cards.

Divrei Torah

Come and Learn: A Modern Immigration Midrash

Read at your seder table where your haggadah instructs you to read the midrash on “My Father Was A Wandering Aramean” during Magid.

A Just, Humane Immigration System Starts With Vision

I have just returned from the borderlands, where the conjoined cities of El Paso and Ciudad Juarez meet.

Ruth: An Immigration Story

This text sheet uses excerpts from the Book of Ruth to begin a conversation about U.S. immigration policy. It is designed to segue into “The Sin of Sodom,” a text study that appears in the revised and expanded Mikdash handbook (p. 30-31). The second page of this resource contains a prayer for immigrant children and...

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