Monday, March 9, 2026

RNS Morning Report - Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

RNS Morning Report Desktop
Overwhelmed, Underfunded
 
As thousands of immigrants deported from the U.S. to Latin America find their footing, faith-based relief organizations are operating with far fewer resources thanks to federal cutbacks.
 
“People arrive with nothing — no money, no way to move and no network to help them,” Karen PΓ©rez, country director of Jesuit Refugee Service Mexico, or JRS-MX, told RNS National Reporter Fiona Murphy. After its budget was cut by 40 %, JRS-MX’s went from 70 staffers to 28.
 
 

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Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

(RNS) — 'There simply isn’t enough capacity even for the local community. It’s much harder with a population that has been abandoned in places that are extremely difficult,' said Karen Perez, the country director for Jesuit Refugee Service in Mexico.
Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

Pope Leo XIV taps career Vatican diplomat Archbishop Caccia as representative to the US

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Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

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Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

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Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

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Deportations surge, aid collapses and faith groups in Latin America struggle to respond

Judge blocks DeSantis’ terrorist label of Muslim group

(RNS) — The court’s injunction allows CAIR-Florida to continue its work while the group’s lawsuit plays out. 

Support Our Work

As a nonprofit newsroom that covers all faiths, RNS sits uniquely at the intersection of freedom of the press and freedom of religion. News tips or feedback? Email comments@religionnews.com. Like the Morning Report? Share it with a friend. Forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here. We rely on reader donations to power our reporting. Donate here. Or send a check to: Religion News Foundation PO Box 1808 Columbia, MO 65205
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Copyright © 2026 RNS, All rights reserved.

WCC news: WCC hosts consultation with heads of churches in the Middle East

The World Council of Churches (WCC) convened an online consultation on 6 March with heads of member churches in the Middle East. Under the theme “Standing Together in Faith and Discernment in a Time of War,” participants met to reflect on the unfolding developments and the widening escalation of violence in the region.

The Shatila refugee camp in Beirut, Lebanon. Photo: Paul Jeffrey/life on Earth

6 March 2026

“We are acutely conscious that in times such as these, the churches are called to stand at the crossroads of suffering and hope — accompanying the fearful, sheltering the vulnerable, and bearing witness to the God of life in the midst of destruction,” said WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay, describing the impetus behind the meeting. “Please know that the global ecumenical fellowship stands with you in solidarity and support.”

The online consultation provided space to hear the church leaders’ assessment of the broader geopolitical situation, including how they perceive current dynamics evolving in the days and weeks ahead. The WCC also listened carefully to the pastoral, humanitarian, security, and institutional challenges confronting churches and communities, and created space for sharing these realities openly. The meeting provided an opportunity to discern together, in a spirit of prayer and ecclesial responsibility, how these developments affect all people in the region, and to reflect collectively on the role the World Council of Churches is called to play at this moment. 

“Today’s video conference was a precious way of experiencing the community as sisters and brothers in Christ beyond our own contexts,” said Bishop Prof. Dr Heinrich Bedford-Strohm, moderator of the WCC central committee. “We have heard firsthand about the suffering and hardship that people in the Middle East are now experiencing as a consequence of the escalation of violence.”

He added that people from the region asked the WCC as a global community of churches to keep them in our prayers. “We promised to follow their call to pray and will do everything in our power to call for the end of escalation and to encourage paths to security and dignity for all people in the Middle East,” Bedford-Strohm concluded. 

Pillay expressed gratitude to the leadership of the churches in the Middle East and their strong commitment. “On behalf of the fellowship of churches, you are not alone,” said Pillay. “We stand with you, and you are accompanied in prayers and hope all over the world.”

Pillay added that the WCC would intensify its work on peace-building efforts, inter-religious dialogue, and advocacy in the region with MECC and its various counterparts. “The humanitarian part is very crucial and WCC will speak to sister organisations to assist people in the region.,” he said. The meeting concluded  in prayers for a better and peaceful world for all.”

WCC expresses grave concern over military attacks against Iran (WCC news release, 28 February 2026)

Amid war, churches amplify call for end to illegal occupation of Palestine (WCC news release, 4 March 2026) 

WCC campaign: From Condemnation to Consequences

Light of Hope: MECC Issues Urgent Humanitarian Appeal and Situation Update on the Middle East Region — The Middle East Council of Churches

The Middle East Council of Churches

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The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
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WCC interview: WCC presents “A Conversation with Archbishop Anastasios of Albania: An Ecumenical Legacy”

The World Council of Churches (WCC) has released “A Conversation with Archbishop Anastasios of Albania: An Ecumenical Legacy,” the archbishop’s final interview with the WCC before his passing on 25 January 2025.
Photo: Aleksander Wasyluk/OrthPhoto.net
6 March 2026

The archbishop offers a retrospective of his life, vocation, and service, through both personal and global lenses. He also weaves together his personal journey, his theological formation, and his decades of engagement in the ecumenical movement.

He emphasizes the importance of unity not as an abstract theological ideal, but as a lived commitment to dialogue, reconciliation, and shared witness in a fragmented world.

A significant part of the interview is dedicated to his missionary journey and his experience in Africa — an experience that, as he explains, reshaped his understanding of the church as a living community of hope rather than a structure of authority. 

Upon leaving for Albania, he had to say farewell to his community in Africa. “They gave me a bag with bananas, with sugar, and with tea for my travels,” he said. “It was so moving, the sensitivity of the people.”

He then turns to Albania, recalling the very first day he arrived in the country, stepping into uncertainty with faith and determination. At that time, Albanians did not have the right to pray or to have Bibles. From those early days, to the rebuilding of the Orthodox Church, and the cultivation of trustful relationships with other faith communities, he presents interreligious dialogue not as theory, but as daily practice rooted in respect and coexistence.

He speaks of present-day Albania. “There is full religious freedom, and also there is a general respect for the ideas and the behaviors of others,” he says, while acknowledging social and religious life is certainly not without its challenges. 

The discussion also addresses pressing contemporary issues: the role of women in the church and society, meaningful participation of children in religious life, the challenges of international relations, the wounds left by economic crisis, and the growing polarization shaping global discourse. 

He analyzes the what he believes are the origins of corruption. "For me it is very clear that we have three main reasons: first, lies; second, greed; third, egoism,” he says. “The most important freedom is the freedom from ourselves, from our egoism, and this is the great message of Christianity: freedom from yourself.”

Throughout, he returns to the conviction that faith must remain a creative, healing force — capable of sustaining resilience and fostering peace.

During the final moments of the interview, he emphasizes that everything we have is a gift of God, and that the only responsibility of us is to share these gifts of God with humility and simplicity with others, and by this way to live deeper in Christ. “The most important is to live in Christ,” he says. “When I am thinking all these periods of Orthodox witness in my life, I can say that I tried to combine theological thinking and research in other religions with pastoral and missionary service and, and at the same time, with sensitivity for the social reality.”

The archbishop also emphasizes unity. “For me, it is simple,” he says. “Our expressions of love for Christ and the others are not are a type of theology. In another way, at the same time, every simple action is only a whisper expressing the love for God.”

Watch the interview

“Anastasios: Missionary, Theologian, Archbishop” international conference convened in Boston (WCC news release, 5 March 2026)

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The World Council of Churches on Facebook
The World Council of Churches on Twitter
The World Council of Churches on Instagram
The World Council of Churches on YouTube
World Council of Churches on SoundCloud
The World Council of Churches' website
The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 356 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 580 million Christians in over 120 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay from the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa.

Media contact: +41 79 507 6363; www.oikoumene.org/press
Our visiting address is:
World Council of Churches
Chemin du Pommier 42
Kyoto Building
Le Grand-Saconnex CH-1218
Switzerland

RNS Morning Report - Religious violence in Nigeria; Florida vs. CAIR; 'morally bad' Americans

RNS Morning Report Desktop
“They came at night, shouting and burning homes…”
When gunmen stormed his Nigerian hamlet, Pastor Emmanuel Ochefu told RNS correspondent Tonny Onyulo they came for his congregation and other Christians. “We cannot pretend that our faith is not part of why we are targeted,” said Ochefu. The pastor's experience was echoed in this week's annual report from the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, which led off with the situation in Nigeria, with its “terrifying crisis of religious violence.”
Yet security analysts, government officials and Muslim leaders, Onyulo found, say the violence is rooted less in religious ideology than in criminality, land disputes, climate pressures and weak governance.
Read Onyulo’s full story on the struggle to understand one of Africa’s longest-running crises.  

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In Nigeria’s protracted violence, debate over whether religion is the cause, or the casualty

In Nigeria’s protracted violence, debate over whether religion is the cause, or the casualty

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Support Our Work

As a nonprofit newsroom that covers all faiths, RNS sits uniquely at the intersection of freedom of the press and freedom of religion. News tips or feedback? Email comments@religionnews.com. Like the Morning Report? Share it with a friend. Forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here. We rely on reader donations to power our reporting. Donate here. Or send a check to: Religion News Foundation PO Box 1808 Columbia, MO 65205
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Copyright © 2026 RNS, All rights reserved.