Current:Home > ContactUS ‘Welcome Corps’ helps resettle LGBTQ+ refugees fleeing crackdowns against gay people -MoneyStream
US ‘Welcome Corps’ helps resettle LGBTQ+ refugees fleeing crackdowns against gay people
View
Date:2025-04-17 10:47:26
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Cabrel Ngounou’s life in Cameroon quickly unraveled after neighbors caught the teenager with his boyfriend.
A crowd surrounded his boyfriend’s house and beat him. Ngounou’s family learned of the relationship and kicked him out. So Ngounou fled — alone and with little money — on a dangerous, four-year journey through at least five countries. He was sexually assaulted in a Libyan prison, harassed in Tunisia and tried unsuccessfully to take a boat to Europe.
“The worst thing was that they caught us. So it was not easy for my family,” Ngounou said. “My sisters told me I need to get out of the house because my place is not there. So that’s what really pushed me to leave my country.”
Ngounou’s troubles drew attention after he joined a protest outside the U.N. refugee agency’s Tunisia office. Eventually, he arrived in the United States, landing in San Francisco in March.
Ngounou joined a growing number of LGBTQ+ people accepted into the Welcome Corps, which launched last year and pairs groups of Americans with newly arrived refugees. So far, the resettlement program has connected 3,500 sponsors with 1,800 refugees, and many more want to help: 100,000 people have applied to become sponsors.
President Joe Biden has sought to rebuild the refugee programs Donald Trump largely dismantled as president, working to streamline the process of screening and placing people in America. New refugee resettlement sites have opened across the country, and on Tuesday, the Biden Administration announced that it resettled 100,000 refugees in fiscal year 2024, the largest number in more than three decades.
In contrast, Trump has pledged to bar refugees from Gaza, reinstate his Muslim ban and impose “ideological screening” for all immigrants if he regains the presidency. He and running mate JD Vance are laying groundwork for their goal of deporting millions of illegal immigrants by amplifying false claims, such as the accusation that Haitians given temporary protected status to remain in the U.S. legally are eating pets in Ohio.
Under Biden, meanwhile, two human rights officials in the State Department were tasked last year with identifying refugees who face persecution either due to their sexual orientation or human rights advocacy.
“LGBTQ refugees are forced to flee their homes due to persecution and violence, not unlike other people,” said Jeremy Haldeman, deputy executive director of the Community Sponsorship Hub, which implements the Welcome Corps on behalf of the State Department. But they are particularly vulnerable because they’re coming from places “where their identities are criminalized and they are at risk of imprisonment or even death.”
More than 60 countries have passed anti-LGBTQ laws and thousands of people have fled the Middle East and Africa seeking asylum in Europe. In April, Uganda’s constitutional court on Wednesday upheld an anti-gay law that allows the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality.”
“There are just a lot of people who are really at risk and are not safe in their country, and they’re usually not safe in the neighboring or regional countries either,” Kathryn Hampton, senior adviser for U.S. Strategy at Rainbow Railroad, which helps LGBTQI+ people facing persecution.
The demand far outstrips capacity: Of more than 15,000 requests for help in 2023, the nonprofit helped resettle 23 refugees through the Welcome Corps program in cities as large as Houston and towns as small as Arlington, Vermont. It has a goal of resettling 50 this year.
“So, we have a lot of urgency as an organization to find and create new pathways that LGBTQI+ people can access to find safety,” Hampton said.
Another refugee in the program, Julieth Luna Garcia, is a transgender woman from El Salvador who settled in Chicago.
Speaking through a translator, the 31-year-old Garcia said she suffered abuse from her family because of her trans identity and couldn’t legally access gender-affirming care until she arrived in the United States.
“I lived with constant fear, even more so at night. I didn’t like to go out. I was really scared that somebody would find me alone and do something,” Garcia said. Since arriving in February, Garcia has found a place to live and a job as a home health aide and hopes to study to become a lawyer. “Here, I’m not scared to say who I am. I’m not scared to tell anyone,” she said.
Maybe the biggest change was starting hormone treatments, she said: “To see yourself in the mirror and see these changes, I can’t really explain it, but it’s really big. It’s an emotional and exciting thing and something I thought I would never experience.”
Welcome Corps sponsors are expected to help refugees adjust for at least three months after they arrive. Garcia said the five volunteers helped her “adapt to a new life with a little less difficulty,” by accessing benefits, getting a work permit and enrolling in English classes.
Ngounou recalled how his sponsors, a team of seven that included a lesbian couple, Anne Raeff and Lori Ostlund, hosted him and connected him with LGBTQ resources and a work training program. They also served as his tour guides to gay life, taking him to the historically gay Castro district, where Ngounou got his first glimpse of the huge rainbow Pride flag and stopped to read every plaque honoring famous gay people.
“Cabrel was just very, very moved by that. Just kind of started crying. We all did,” Raeff recalled.
“I know that feeling like when we were young, when you’d go into a gay bar and you’d feel like this sense of kind of freedom, like this community,” she said. “That was the only place where you could go and actually be open. And that ... this is this community of people and we all have this in common.”
Now the 19-year-old Ngounou works in a coffee shop and takes college courses, with the goal of becoming a social worker. He hopes the boyfriend he met in Tunisia can visit him in San Francisco — and he still finds it hard to believe that they can share their love openly.
“Here I’m really me ... I feel free,” he said with a laugh. “I feel free to have my boyfriend and walk with him in the street. I feel free, you know, to enjoy myself with him wherever we want to enjoy ourselves. But in Tunisia or anywhere else, in Cameroon, you have to hide such things.”
veryGood! (3485)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Texas schools got billions in federal pandemic relief, but it is coming to an end as classes begin
- Four are killed in the crash of a single-engine plane in northwestern Oklahoma City
- Jack Black says Tenacious D 'will be back' following Kyle Gass' controversial comments
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- USA basketball players juggle motherhood and chasing 8th gold medal at Paris Olympics
- Save an Extra 20% on West Elm Sale Items, 60% on Lounge Underwear, 70% on Coach Outlet & More Deals
- 'Star Wars' star Daisy Ridley reveals Graves' disease diagnosis
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- PHOTO COLLECTION: Harris and Walz first rally in Philadelphia
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Disney returns to profit in third quarter as streaming business starts making money for first time
- Johnny Wactor Shooting: Police Release Images of Suspects in General Hospital Star's Death
- A judge has branded Google a monopolist, but AI may bring about quicker change in internet search
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Why Kit Harington Thinks His and Rose Leslie's Kids Will Be Very Uncomfortable Watching Game of Thrones
- Customers line up on Ohio’s first day of recreational marijuana sales
- 2024 Olympics: Tennis Couple's Emotional Gold Medal Win Days After Breaking Up Has Internet in Shambles
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
2024 Olympics: Why Simone Biles Addressed MyKayla Skinner's Comments Amid Win
Keira Knightley Shares Daughter’s Dyslexia Diagnosis in Rare Family Update
Pakistani man with ties to Iran is charged in plot to carry out political assassinations on US soil
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
2024 Olympics: Ryan Lochte Reveals Why U.S. Swimmers Can’t Leave the Village During Games
Could another insurrection happen in January? This film imagines what if
Authorities arrest man accused of threatening mass casualty event at Army-Navy football game