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KPBS Midday Edition

How One Church Became A Migrant Processing Center

A migrant and his children wait to hear if their number is called to apply for asylum in the United States, at the border in Tijuana, Mexico.
Gregory Bull AP
A migrant and his children wait to hear if their number is called to apply for asylum in the United States, at the border in Tijuana, Mexico.
For many of the more than 4,000 asylum seekers that have passed through this church since October, this is the first real meal they have had in days.

Rev. Guy Wilson stands at the head of a long table in his church’s mess hall, linking hands with a group of Central American asylum seekers to say grace.

Children and their parents all bow their heads in prayer before diving into trays full of food: chicken salad tostadas, stewed turkey and pasta with marinara sauce.

“I'm probably one of the first ‘gringo’ faces they get to see that smiles and tells them welcome,” Wilson, the pastor at Our Lady of Soledad Catholic Church in Coachella, says. “Because that's not been their impression of coming into the United States.”

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For many of the more than 4,000 asylum seekers that have passed through this church since October, this is the first real meal they have had in days.

“I had a little bit of money, and I used that to buy little snacks and drinks for my daughter,” says Alberto Xavi.

Xavi left his home in La Union, El Salvador a few weeks ago, fleeing pressure to join a local gang. He made his way through Mexico and crossed the border into the United States, surrendering to Customs and Border Protection.

Now he is awaiting a court hearing on his asylum request.

But instead of being processed by the federal government and sent across the country to stay with his relatives, he finds himself in the middle of the California desert. This church is completing tasks that, in the past, were done by the federal government.

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“We are overwhelmed,” says Carlos Pintones with the El Centro Sector Border Patrol. “We have to find a different tactic or different way of handling the volume.”

As the border has become flooded with migrants, Customs and Border Protection has outsourced some of its work to churches like this one in Coachella.

Here, church volunteers not only feed the beleaguered travelers but help them pick out new clothes and arrange travel to their final destinations.

Most of the time that is across the country, a reality underscored by the history of Central America in the 1980s. Back then, asylum seekers were flown to the United States, mainly to the East Coast.

Now their relatives are finding their road to asylum is much more arduous.

“We receive mothers who have little infants and they hold on to them so tight. And the reason is they're fearful that the government's going to take their children from them,” Rev. Wilson says. “Here, at least, they know they’re safe and we have other mothers to hold their children so they can bathe and eat.”

Seira Godinez, 17, says she is traveling to Atlanta, Georgia to meet up with some of her relatives. “I thank God that my father and I are here,” she says. “It has not been easy.”

As for what she wants to do after she makes it, “I’m not sure yet,” she says. “But I am ready to work hard to make it in this country.”