Prayers for Peacemakers, 6 September 2017

Facebook
Twitter
Email
WhatsApp
Print

Prayers for Peacemakers, 6 September 2017

Pray for the nearly 800,000 “dreamers”, who based
on the US presidential decision are in danger of losing legally
provided permission to work, study and live in the USA and of
deportation to countries they left as children.

Your classmate, your colleague, your neighbor, your friend, your
partner, the person who helps you in the shop, the person who shakes
your hand in the church, any one of them could be a “dreamer.”

“Dreamers” are called women, men, people who arrived to
the United States of America as minors before
their 16th birthday and have lived there since 2007 or longer. Most of
them came from Mexico and different countries of Central America.

Yesterday the president of the United States announced the end of
the program that has provided legal temporary immigration status to
the “dreamers.” Nearly 800,000 people will lose their legal
protection and permission to work, study and live in the USA. They
are in danger of being deported to places they have not known since
being children or infants.

Let us pray for all those who came to the USA following the
difficult decisions made by their families and adults around them.
Let us pray for their safety and protection so that they may continue
living their lives in the USA. Let us pray for all who act in
solidarity with the “dreamers” and others deemed “illegal”
by nationalistic segregation. Let us work together to change the
increasingly restrictive and selective immigration policies of the
countries we live in.

People holding banners: Protect all immigrants, and You say I'm just a dreamer but I'm not the only one.
           Photo from Al Jazeera

Subscribe to the Friday Bulletin

Get Ryan’s thoughts and the entire bulletin every Friday in your inbox, and don’t miss out on news from the teams, a list of what we’re reading and information on ways to take action.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Read More Stories

An image from inside a vehicle, looking out the windshield into the green hills of Northeast Antioquia. The dirver and steering wheel are visible on the left and on the right a leg hangs down from someone sitting on the roof. A truck is a few meters ahead, laden with cargo and a person hangs off the back of the truck.

Measuring change

How do we measure the impact of peace work? It’s not always an easy thing to do. Change comes slowly, and it’s rarely spectacular. Sometimes,

Image of the Grassy Nations community members leading the River Run march in 2024. Signs read “Shut it down”, and “Justice for Grassy Narrows.”

Settler colonialism will never win: the resistance of Grassy Narrows First Nation

Jenny, an organizer with SURJ and the Grassy Narrows Solidarity Group, joined a CPT delegation to Turtle Island three years ago. Since then, she has found ways to continue to support the people of Grassy Narrows. Here she reflects on lessons she learned and ways settlers can get involved in dismantling settler colonialism.

landscape of northeast antioquia at sunset

The longer view

In the aftermath of the election, CPT Colombia has been meeting with the community of El Guayabo to assess what the result means for them

Skip to content