Agnes Stipetich, Donor and Volunteer By: Roxane Ramos As a volunteer and advocate for immigration reform, Agnes is almost busier than when she taught elementary and middle school for 32 years in Wisconsin. Far from the U.S.–Mexico border, one might think immigration would be a distant issue, but parts of the state rely heavily on farm workers from Latin America. Agnes discovered more about their trials when, as a literacy volunteer in 2009, she taught English to one of them, an …Read More
Archives for 2014
New Video on Immigration and the Catholic Church
Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor: Immigration and the Catholic Church is a new video by USCCB Migration and Refugee Services that highlights the Church's long history of pastoral care for immigrants and advocacy on immigration issues. Share the video to help Catholics and non-Catholics alike become informed about the Church's important work in these areas. Watch the video now …Read More
Immersion Excursion
By: Roxane Ramos Spending a day at the KBI puts visitors right where they can learn the most about the migrant experience—at the border. On a bright February morning in Nogales, Sonora, eleven students from Alma College in Michigan line up in the comedor (soup kitchen) with KBI staff and other volunteers to greet the migrants patiently waiting to enter. These migrants, many deported to Nogales from other points along the border, have endured long, often harrowing, journeys, and carry …Read More
Changing Hearts and Minds
By: Roxane Ramos The KBI’s educational programs reach out to dispel myths about migrants and reinforce the connection among us. One of the most misunderstood and contentious issues today is immigration. People in both the United States and Mexico have strong feelings about the subject, either sympathetic to the migrants, resistant to reform, or somewhere in between. But wherever one falls on the continuum, misinformation abounds and there continues to be a basic misunderstanding about who …Read More
Up Close: The People of the KBI
By: Roxane Ramos West Cosgrove, Director of Education “If you want to learn about globalization, just come to Nogales,” says West Cosgrove, who summarizes his 35-year career and life passion in two words—border education. As West explains, the U.S.–Mexico border is the only place in the world where an industrialized nation borders a developing one. At those points of transition, the contrasts are stark and instructive. One trip to a Mexican maquila (factory), where shirts or auto parts …Read More
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