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Migrant Workers
Searching the sheep and seeking them out...(Ezekiel 34:11)
Asians and an increasing number of Africans and Hispanic Americans coming from highly indebted poor countries compose the majority of about 125 million migrant workers worldwide. They are those who because of
  • abject poverty, joblessness, landlessness;
  • inequitable distribution of wealth, the widening gap between rich and poor, the burden of international debt; trade globilization, economic injustice;
  • armed conflict, political oppression, abuse of political power; and
  • cultural, social, and religious intolerance
  • have left their homes and countries in search of better opportunities in foreign lands.

Although stories of success have been encouraging, they are outweighed by tragic stories about the destruction of the lives of people. All of the people leaving home are in search of a more compassionate environment and a dream of a better tomorrow. Instead, many have found themselves facing oppressive conditions that lessen their dignity as human beings. Worse, more and more of these migrants are forced to accept

  • the pain of separation from families
  • the oppression of being forced to leave home to find work
  • the harsh consequences for migrant workers who overstay and work as illegal undocumented laborers in inhospitable receiving countries, and
  • the adversities of some migrants who are forced to give up their Christian faith and embrace a new religion in order to stay on in host countries and suffer, nevertheless, environments of ethnic hostility.

Often overworked, sometimes underpaid, the human rights of migrant workers are generally unprotected by the laws of host countries. And their welfare is often ignored by the embassies of their own countries. The physical and mental health of migrants is often endangered by neglect and withheld treatment. Many migrant workers return home indebted, disabled, and ill, both physically and mentally.

In the harsh environments in which they live, some migrants escape responsibility through the abuse of alcohol and prohibited drugs. Others have been sexually abused, flogged, or even imprisoned and held hostage until their families can raise money to ransom them. In some cases, migrants have been killed or have, in despair, committed suicide. Sometimes the families of migrants receive only their bodies with little or no explanation of how they died.

The facts reviewed up to this point attempt to show the human face of the migrant workers issue. However, there are also broader consequences. Many of the migrant workers come from traditional societies and their issues tear at the fabric, and even threaten the continuing existence of these societies. Traditional societies have become increasingly subject to the tremendous social and psychological pressures brought on by the absence of breadwinners, many of them women and mothers. These pressures sometimes result in broken homes and broken bodies.

In the face of these problems, how have our churchesÑespecially in the receiving countriesÑresponded? How should they respond? How should they search the sheep and seek them out? How should they ease the burdens of the oppressed, the poor, the suffering? And how many migrants must lose their faith in a just God before the churches give them sanctuary?

Many questions have been asked. Much has been said. Much more needs to be done. Let no more tomorrows come before our churches seriously recognize the plight of migrant workers as an issue of justice requiring urgent action.

APJN, as part of its Christian responsibility and mandate, takes the side of vulnerable, exploited, and marginalized migrant workers. APJN commits itself to their empowerment and offers them its services and support as expressions of our obedience to God's commandment to Love our Neighbors.

APJN appeals to the churches of the Anglican Communion in sending and receiving countries, and to countries that were once created by immigrants and developed by migrant labor, to take a leading role in the search for justice for the least of these our brothers and sisters.

APJN urges the governments and state policy makers to

  • repeal all unjust and anti-migrant laws and policies, and
  • enact legislation to protect the rights and promote the well-being of migrant workers and their families.

APJN calls upon the Provinces of the Anglican Communion to call on the 20 signatory countries needed for the1990 United Nations Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and their Families to become an international law and to immediately

  • sign and ratify the UN Migrant Convention (if they have not previously done so); and
  • immediately begin to abide by and implement the provisions of the Convention.

As members of APJN, we

  • urge our brothers and sisters of all faiths, in ecumenical coalitions, in partner NGOs, and in government offices and agencies to work for the liberation of migrant workers.
  • commend this report to the Anglican Consultative Council (ACC), the Provinces of the Anglican Communion and their constituent dioceses for their proactive endorsement and support; and, finally
  • express and reaffirm our commitment to Christ, to one another, and to the people we profess to serve in faithful response to GodÕs purpose for us all.