In the 1980s, hundreds of congregations across the country declared themselves to be sanctuaries, safe havens for refugees fleeing civil war in Central America. Today, there’s a revival underway of that original refugee sanctuary movement, in which churches make themselves sanctuary spaces.

More than 800 congregations have signed on to offer refuge to undocumented immigrants who face deportation orders. Reverend Deborah Lee is program director of the The Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity, which advocates on behalf of immigrants.

LEE: The way that the sanctuary movement has interpreted that law is that harboring means concealing and actually what we’re doing is public sanctuary. So we’re coming out to the public because we’re actually counting on public support.

Listen to the full interview here

Recent Articles

Gen Z misery, explained in one chart
Vox, Global Flourishing Study
Jun 3, 2025
Celebrating Chris Stewart’s Impact and Commitment
Templeton Religion Trust (TRT) today announced that after twelve years of trusted leadership, Christ
A Letter from the Leadership and Staff at Templeton Religion Trust
May 30, 2025
The ‘sacramental shame’ many LGBTQ+ conservative Christians wrestle with – and how t
MSN.com, Grantee Dawne Moon
May 26, 2025