U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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Honoring World Refugee Day

June 20, 2025

In May of 1939, a boat of German Jews aboard the St. Louis plead for asylum in the United States. They were denied entry and returned to Europe. 254 of the passengers were killed in the Holocaust.

This unconscionable past haunts us. We made a commitment to ‘never again’. Never again would we force someone back into the belly of unthinkable atrocity; never again would we be complicit in the persecution of our fellow humans.

The international community codified this promise in the Refugee Convention, which protects persons seeking safety from similarly grave danger as the passengers of the St. Louis.  Those who have fled their country due to a well-founded fear of persecution on account of their race, religion, political opinion, nationality, or membership in a particular social group, should not be sent back to a state that threatens their life or freedom.

Refugees leave everything behind in hopes of safety. Elie Wiesel, reflecting on his own experience in a 1997 print piece for USCRI, wrote that “the condition of the refugee is such that he or she dies more than one death.” To be a refugee is to experience a total displacement from one’s life, community, and homeland.

World Refugee Day is a reminder of our humanitarian obligation to protect those fleeing persecution.  A border is no moral justification to return someone to a place where they fear being tortured, interned, or killed with impunity.

Yet we are, once again, repeating the mistakes of history. Earlier this year, the U.S. refugee program shuttered. Refugees whose travel was approved found themselves mired, condemned to spend another eternity in the camps, where water, supplies, and food rations are short. The right to seek asylum at the border has been razed to its bones, with people fleeing persecution stranded in Mexico.

We have forgotten that our obligation to protect the persecuted is not merely a legal one but grounded in respect for the sanctity of human life.  Today, we should remember the world’s refugees, not only with words, but through our policies and with a renewed commitment to save the lives of those in need.

 

USCRI, founded in 1911, is a non-governmental, not-for-profit international organization committed to working on behalf of refugees and immigrants and their transition to a dignified life.


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