Northern NJ Sanctuary Coalition

Northern NJ Sanctuary Coalition Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Northern NJ Sanctuary Coalition, Charitable organisation, P. O. Box 5017, Caldwell, NJ.

The Northern NJ Sanctuary Coalition is a 501(c)(3) organization composed of religious congregations, human rights organizations and individuals who have joined together to provide humanitarian support and advocacy for all asylum seekers.

11/08/2025

Following is a portion of a letter sent to me by a former client of the Northern NJ Sanctuary Coalition, the one who's picture in a graduation gown is seen above: I have a good news!!!
My 15 years old son, Jeremiah Samba has written and published a historical epic book. Any support will be appreciated. For the lovers of history. You won't be disappointed. Please, share/spread the news. The book can be found on Amazon
“Shadow of the Unconquered “ by Jeremiah Samba

Send a message to learn more

Margaryta needs your help!  What an easy way to do something good for a deserving asylee.
07/07/2024

Margaryta needs your help! What an easy way to do something good for a deserving asylee.

The Northern New Jersey Sanctuary Coalition (NNJSC, Inc.) is … Northern New Jersey Sanctuary Coalition NNJSC needs your support for From War Zone to Home: Support Margaryta's New Beginnings

The NNJSC is helping this 83 year old survivor and refugee from the war in Ukraine as well as the Holocaust to continue ...
10/03/2023

The NNJSC is helping this 83 year old survivor and refugee from the war in Ukraine as well as the Holocaust to continue to pay rent on an apartment in NJ located near her brother and sister-in-law. Due to incredible backlogs in the bureaucracy of our immigration system, she is still awaiting the results of her Asylum hearing. Until then, she cannot apply for housing and certain other subsidies. She also does not yet have Medicaid. Any donation you could make to this GoFundMe would be a tremendous help to this lovely lady and her family.

My name is Sally Pillay and I am the Case Worker with The No… Northern NJ Sanctuary Coalition needs your support for HELP 83-year-old Shoah, Ukrainian war survivor!

Finally, the 3 kids (and wife) of the Ugandan asylee (now Green Card holder), for whom you helped make possible their jo...
03/07/2023

Finally, the 3 kids (and wife) of the Ugandan asylee (now Green Card holder), for whom you helped make possible their journey here, have been reunited with their father . You will notice the kids appear quite a bit older in these pictures, as, in fact they are. The original picture was taken some years ago in Uganda.

07/07/2022

Hi all,
Please see the petition below from Tatiana Durbak, a member of Interfaith Campaign for Just Closures. As Tatiana points out, it was initiated by supporters of Ukrainian refugees, but has much broader impact, including, as we know, for NNJSC clients, as it addresses the urgent need to eliminate the huge backlog of Employment Authorization Documents.
Jon

This petition was started by the organizer of a group of immigration attorneys who are helping Ukrainians, but it helps any immigrant who has received Humanitarian Parole. Please share it with your groups. Questions can be directed to me, or, even better, to [email protected].

https://www.change.org/p/immediate-work-permits-for-ukrainians-afghans-and-others-with-humanitarian-parole?recruiter=1270642566&recruited_by_id=814ef220-fd6d-11ec-b519-c50f7c1f5f25&utm_source=share_petition&utm_campaign=share_for_starters_page&utm_medium=copylink
Thank you, much,

Tatiana Durb

Highlight of "Table for All with Buki Elegbede: Afghanistan" show streamed on 06/22/22 at NJ PBS. This show is about cul...
07/04/2022

Highlight of "Table for All with Buki Elegbede: Afghanistan" show streamed on 06/22/22 at NJ PBS. This show is about culture, food, and life of Afghan community in the US. To watch the full episode : https://www.njtvonline.org/programs/table-for-all/
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Church World Service- Jersey City
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Highlight of "Table for All with Buki Elegbede: Afghanistan" show streamed on 06/22/22 at NJ PBS. This show is about culture, food, and life of Afghan community in the US.
To watch the full episode : https://www.njtvonline.org/programs/table-for-all/

"Table for All with Buki Elegbede" is a cinematic docuseries focusing on culture, diversity & inclusion through the lens of food - all in the state of New Jersey. Host and Jersey native, Buki Elegbede, takes you on the ultimate food tour around the Garden State. He’ll take you into restaurants and...

Please join the Interfaith Campaign for Just Closures on March 19th. We will be meeting at Elizabeth Detention Center, w...
03/10/2022

Please join the Interfaith Campaign for Just Closures on March 19th. We will be meeting at Elizabeth Detention Center, where we will gather in solidarity with ICE's victims and call for an end to America's unjust immigration enforcement system. During the demonstration, speakers will also discuss the importance of The New Way Forward Act and the Values Act, both legislation aimed at ameliorating current immigration systems.

Please bring at least one item you would bring on a long, uncertain journey from danger to hoped-for safety.

Details can be found below and in the attached graphics.
March 19th, 2-3:30pm
365 Evans St., Elizabeth, NJ

The Northern New Jersey Sanctuary Coalition held an education session on Wednesday, February 23. The session was about t...
02/26/2022

The Northern New Jersey Sanctuary Coalition held an education session on Wednesday, February 23. The session was about the New Way Forward Act (H.R. 536), legislation that would take a step forward to end immigrant criminalization. More information can be found in the graphics and on newwayforwardact.org.

01/29/2022

HIAS Blog » Report Card: The U.S. Asylum System After President Biden’s First Year
Report Card: The U.S. Asylum System After President Biden’s First Year
JAN 19, 2022BLOG POST
Dan Friedman

Select Language​▼

A Haitian migrant glances back toward the United States while crossing the Rio Grande to Mexico from Del Rio, Texas on Sep. 20, 2021 as U.S. immigration authorities began deporting immigrants back to Haiti and thousands more waited under a bridge in Del Rio.

(John Moore/Getty Images)

During his presidential campaign, Joe Biden promised to reform our nation’s immigration system with “real leadership and real solutions” and recommit our country to welcoming asylum seekers and refugees. Yet, in office, the Biden administration has prioritized some policies designed to deter people from seeking asylum in the U.S. and both President Biden and Vice President Harris told migrants in Central America “do not come.” Despite some successes, the Biden administration has also overseen a series of anti-asylum decisions. We spoke to the HIAS Policy and Advocacy team to get their help in grading the administration on its first year of work toward solving major asylum issues.

The Biden Administration’s First Year

Asylum Cooperative Agreements (ACAs)
GRADE: A, excellent work

One of the ways that the Trump administration prevented people from gaining asylum in the U.S. was through a series of agreements with El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras known as the Asylum Cooperative Agreements (ACAs). Under these agreements, the administration would deport individuals seeking asylum in the U.S. to one of these countries and force them to seek protection there instead. This applied even if the asylum seeker had never even visited this country. A report showed that not a single one of the people deported under the ACAs received asylum in the new country. Early in the administration’s first year, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken suspended and terminated the ACAs with El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras.

Arriving Unaccompanied Minors
GRADE: D, poor

Early in 2021, when a large number of unaccompanied minors entered the U.S., the administration ran out of licensed shelter space and began putting children in unlicensed Emergency Intake Sites (EIS). Though timing could explain the need for EISs, as their use took place early in the administration’s tenure, these sites do not provide children with the protection they would have in licensed shelters. Whistleblowers alleged poor treatment of the children at these sites, including children being burned with scalding water and threatened with deportation.

Attorney General Decisions
GRADE: A-, an excellent start

Attorney General Merrick Garland has used his power over immigration court judges to undo some of the more egregious barriers to asylum in immigration court. This included, in one set of decisions, reducing the obstacles for survivors of domestic violence and victims of family-based persecution who are seeking protection. In another decision, he restored immigration judges’ ability to pause proceedings, which helps immigrants to apply for relief and the government to focus on more important cases. Finally, he reduced the burden on asylum seekers to prove every aspect of their asylum case again on appeal.

Department of Homeland Security Metering
GRADE: B-, good

Further to a federal court ruling, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) ended the “metering” policy. Also known as queue management, metering restricted the number of individuals who could request asylum at ports of entry per day. Since metering punishes individuals by forcing them to return to the country they are fleeing, it is unconstitutional. Any new policy must guarantee that they can seek asylum in the United States.

Border Programs
GRADE: D, poor

At the U.S.-Mexico border, the U.S. government does not provide the protection mandated by international agreements about asylum seekers. While it did exempt unaccompanied children, the administration continues to misuse public health laws to expel many arriving noncitizens without giving them the chance to claim asylum. And, while the Biden administration attempted to end the Remain in Mexico program, which forces asylum seekers to wait in dangerous parts of Mexico while seeking asylum in the U.S., a court required the Biden administration to restart the program. Despite fighting the court order and appealing the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court, the administration also expanded the program to additional nationalities, including Haitian nationals who are forced to wait in Mexico where they are vulnerable to anti-black and anti-Haitian prejudice.

Del Rio Crossing
GRADE: F, bad fail

In September, thousands of asylum seekers – mostly Haitian – began crossing the U.S. southern border near Del Rio, Texas. DHS couldn’t process these asylum seekers in a timely manner, so it began forcing the asylum seekers to wait under a bridge in 90-degree heat with little food, water, or sanitation. As the situation worsened, DHS responded with a six-point plan that largely focused on deporting Haitians to their home country as quickly as possible, despite the Biden administration’s acknowledgment of Haiti’s “deteriorating political crisis, violence, and staggering increase in human rights abuses.”



Opportunities for the Biden Administration’s Second Year

Defining the Right to Asylum and Refugee Protection
GRADE: INCOMPLETE, promising

The Trump administration proposed a number of regulatory changes that would restrict the rights of asylum seekers. The courts have stopped some changes, while the Biden administration has rescinded or delayed others. Administration plans include asking for public input on modifying or permanently removing the above-mentioned regulations, as well as creating regulations that clarify what grounds qualify asylum seekers for legal protections.

Family Reunification
GRADE: INCOMPLETE, more work needed

In February 2021, President Biden created the Interagency Task Force on the Reunification of Families to reunify families separated at the U.S. southern border. The task force has contacted and registered hundreds of families, expedited processing of passport documents for certain families, and established a parole process for families to enter the U.S. However, more than 1,000 children who were separated from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border are yet to be located. Some organizations have sued the federal government for damages related to the separation, but the Biden administration is currently fighting the lawsuits in court after settlement negotiations broke down.

Immigration Court Backlog
GRADE: INCOMPLETE, more work needed

There are now over 1.5 million cases in the immigration courts. This represents a wait time of over four years for those seeking asylum in the court system. This is patently unfair and untenable.

ICE Detainees
GRADE: INCOMPLETE, more work needed

Over 20,000 people are still being held in ICE detention centers awaiting deportation or release, though this no longer includes any families as of December 2021. Before the start of the pandemic, the number rose above 50,000, but when President Biden took office it was approximately 15,000.

Please join our Annual Meeting this Wednesday, January 26 at 7pm. For the Zoom link, please message us or email info@nnj...
01/23/2022

Please join our Annual Meeting this Wednesday, January 26 at 7pm.
For the Zoom link, please message us or email [email protected] .

01/16/2022

Leaked Photos Reveal Inhumane Conditions in Border Processing Centers
Posted by Katy Murdza | Jan 14, 2022 | Asylum, Border Enforcement, Detention, Enforcement, Humanitarian Protection

Leaked Photos Reveal Inhumane Conditions in Border Processing Centers
New leaked photos of Border Patrol stations in Yuma, Arizona show Customs and Border Protection’s (CBP) inhumane treatment of people apprehended at the border— revealing that years of overcrowded, unsanitary, and cruel conditions continue despite multiple deaths, legal challenges, and the Biden administration’s promise to create a humane immigration system.

The 18 photos show people in warehouse, tent, and outdoor areas. Inside, people stand shoulder to shoulder and sleep with no space between them. Adults, children, and babies line the interior hallway of a tent facility. The overcrowding makes it impossible for the people in the photos to social distance. CBP generally does not test people before detaining them in close quarters, putting them at risk of exposure to COVID-19 while they are detained.

Also in the photos, people in outdoor areas sit on the cement floor under shade from hanging mylar “space blankets”. Yuma experienced near-freezing temperatures at night during the time period of the photos.

CBP’s detention conditions have been consistently inhumane across presidential administrations. Photos of CBP’s Tucson sector facilities in 2015 show unsanitary toilet areas inside cells with no privacy. Other photos and a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of the Inspector General report show dangerous overcrowding in 2019, including the holding of hundreds of people under a bridge in El Paso. In 2018 and 2019, three children died in CBP processing centers, and others died soon after release or transfer out of the agency’s custody. A 2019 complaint to the Department of Homeland Security’s oversight agencies described CBP’s denial of medical care to children.

In 2020, a federal court ordered that CBP provide people detained for 12 or more hours in the agency’s Tucson sector with a sleeping mat, hygiene supplies, regular meals, and clean drinking water. The court also ordered Border Patrol to provide people processed by the agency who are detained for longer than 48 hours a bed, blanket, shower, and medical assessment. Yet denial of these basic necessities continues in many parts of the border. For example, in October 2021, thousands of Haitians were held for days in an outdoor camp near Del Rio, Texas. A lawsuit and government investigation are pending regarding allegations of physical abuse and racial discrimination at the camp.

Yuma has experienced historically high border crossings in recent months. While some have argued that the current overcrowding there is reason for an increased crackdown at the border, current anti-immigrant policies likely contribute to the operational challenges. The Biden administration has chosen to continue Trump’s cruel Title 42 policy, which allows CBP to expel people at the border without even a meaningful opportunity to request asylum. The quick expulsions have led many people to attempt multiple border crossings, often being apprehended multiple times, leading to increased total apprehensions.

Given reports on recent flight patterns, some of the people in the photos are likely Haitian. Each weekday, two planes have each taken up to 130 Haitians from Yuma to Laredo, Texas and then on to Haiti. Over 14,000 Haitians have been expelled since September. Advocates criticized the continued expulsions to Haiti this week during the 12th anniversary of a devastating earthquake that forced Haitians to leave their country. Many of them settled in Latin American countries that they have recently had to leave.

The conditions under which CBP is holding people in Yuma are inhumane and illegal. The agency’s history of racist and cruel treatment has demonstrated that it is not capable of serving a humanitarian mission. People arriving at the border should be received by community-based organizations that can provide them shelter, medical treatment, legal orientation, and assistance in reaching their destination.

FILED UNDER: CBP Complaints, Customs and Border Protection, Department of Homeland Security, Doe v. Johnson

01/07/2022

On January 26, 7pm, we will have our Annual Meeting on Zoom to vote for NNJSC Board Members and Officers for the 2022 year and to hear the Chairperson's report of our activities in 2021. If interested in receiving the link to our zoom meeting, contact us through our website, nnjsanctuary.org.

Address

P. O. Box 5017
Caldwell, NJ
07006

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