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The ‘complicated’ path to spiritual care in ICE detention

(RNS) — When immigrants detained at Georgia’s Stewart Detention Center, well known for overcrowding and harsh conditions, ask for prayer, volunteers from El Refugio don’t hesitate.

The small secular nonprofit was founded in 2010 in Lumpkin, Georgia, to serve those imprisoned in Stewart, the second-largest immigrant detention center in the United States. El Refugio sends volunteers weekly to spend an hour with detainees.

“It usually starts with someone saying, ‘Can you pray for me? Can I pray for you?’” said Amilcar Valencia, the organization’s executive director, who has been visiting detention facilities more than 14 years. “I think faith is what many people who are detained say sustains them. It’s what gives them a sense to continue to fight for their case and to support other people who may be struggling inside of the detention center.”

Though El Refugio operates with only four staff, its small team of volunteers each week drives hours in some cases to offer detainees accompaniment, help with legal navigation, emotional support and, at times, prayer. Volunteers sit across glass dividers, using phones to speak with detainees, much like regular visitors. “The guards know about us and what we do,” Valencia said. “Typically, we try to establish a relationship with the warden.”

More than 61,000 people are being held in American immigration detention — up from around 36,000 in August 2024, amid the Trump administration’s crackdown. As the numbers rise, access to pastoral care inside remains inconsistent, faith leaders and volunteers serving immigrant communities told RNS. Chaplaincy is often left to volunteers, sometimes assigned to prison staff, occasionally contracted to outside nonprofits and, in rare cases, negotiated directly by local Catholic dioceses. The result is a patchwork system that leaves many detainees, more than 70% of whom have no criminal conviction, without reliable spiritual support.

webRNS ICE Detention2 The 'complicated' path to spiritual care in ICE detention

A group organized by El Refugio demonstrates outside the Stewart Detention Center in 2022 in Lumpkin, Ga. (Photo courtesy of El Refugio)

Valencia said he reaches out to each new warden at the 2,000-bed Stewart Detention Center to explain his group’s work. But a high staff turnover rate at the facility, which is owned and operated by CoreCivic, one of the largest private prison companies in the U.S., makes it difficult to build a lasting relationship with the administration, Valencia said.

“It’s complicated,” he said. “Sometimes we just don’t get any response, and it’s been like that for the last few months, I will say. They just don’t talk to us, the warden nor the new administration at the facility.”

A chaplain is on staff at Stewart and is supported by volunteers, including those from El Refugio, said Ryan Gustin, a spokesperson for CoreCivic. 

“Chaplains rely on a robust network of volunteers and religious resource groups to ensure a variety of faiths are accommodated for those in our care,” Gustin said. “This allows individuals, especially those navigating the immigration system, to continue growing in their faith.”

However, Valencia said he’s concerned religious materials are not provided to detained people who request them in the facility, among other issues. 

“We hear from people all the time, too, that religious dietary restrictions are hardly ever met,” Valencia said. 

El Refugio volunteers respond directly to detainees’ requests for religious items. They have supplied Bibles, hymnals, Christian coloring books, a Torah translated into Russian and hijabs for women in detention, where the average stay is more than 50 days.