For weeks, St. John Villa Academy on Landis Road in Staten Island has been the site of near daily protests by neighbors who donā€™t want asylum seekers, and migrants living there.

ā€œJesus said, ā€˜Welcome the stranger,ā€™ā€ said Rev. Chloe Breyer from Interfaith Center of New York.


What You Need To Know

  • About a dozen Christian, Jewish and Muslim leaders gathered outside of the St. John Villa Academy with immigrant advocates on Thursday to share a welcoming message of compassion for migrants being housed at the former Catholic school

  • The group said their faith compels them to help the 300 single-adult women and families being housed at St. John Villa Academy, which the city owns

  • Protestors, who are opposed to the migrants being housed at the St. John Villa Academy protested simultaneously as the interfaith demonstration

But on Thursday, about a dozen Christian, Jewish and Muslim leaders gathered outside of the former Catholic school with immigrant advocates to share a different message. The group said their faith compels them to help the 300 single adult women and families being housed at St. John Villa Academy, which the city owns.

ā€œBecause we serve Jesus Christ, who was also, if we would talk about in todayā€™s terms, would also be an immigrant,ā€ said Antoinette Dogan, associate minister at First Central Baptist Church. ā€œHis mother and father had to take him out of one country into another because of persecution.ā€

For weeks, neighbors on Landis Road have demonstrated against the retrofitted migrant shelter because they donā€™t want migrants living there.

ā€œWe are not suggesting that people who are anti-immigration are bad,ā€ said Rev. Dr. Demetrius Carolina, pastor of First Central Baptist Church. ā€œWe are suggesting that there needs to be a light shined in the minds of people - our brothers and sisters on both sides.ā€

But at times, protestors, some of whom have rallied frequently ā€” drowned out the faith leaders.

Immigrant advocates point out that applying for asylum is a legal process. But many demonstrators say they worry about their childrenā€™s safety, despite the near constant police presence outside the shelter.

Two weeks ago a judge ruled the City can shelter migrants at the site - a ruling against Staten Island elected leaders who filed suit trying to block the cityā€™s plans.

Staten Island Interfaith and community leaders said they have been helping migrants for the past nine months and plan to continue doing so.

ā€œOur voices must be louder and stronger and stand for what America is,ā€ said Rabbi Judah Neuberger of Bā€™nai Israel.

They also said they need more help from elected officials.

ā€œAccess to work permits,ā€ said Rev. Chloe Breyer of the Interfaith Center of New York. ā€œBecause everybody wants to work. Another thing is legal assistance because everybody needs legal assistance in some way. The third is proper resourcing for education.ā€

The city recently confirmed that only 2% of the more than 60,000 migrants and asylum seekers currently in the cityā€™s care are being sheltered on Staten Island.

The majority of migrants are in Manhattan and Queens.