WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS ASYLUM SUPPORT NETWORK
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FACTS ABOUT ASYLUM

  • Asylum is an immigration status for people who are in danger of persecution - the threat of severe harm or death - if they return to their country of origin.
  • Asylum is an international right: the United States signed an international treaty in 1968 agreeing to uphold the right to asylum.
  • Every way to enter the United States - with a visa, parole, asking to enter at a border, or crossing a border "without inspection - is the "right way" to claim asylum. There is no way of entering the US that makes someone ineligible for asylum.
  • Many people who are seeking asylum have been held in immigration detention. Having been in detention does not make someone a criminal, and does not mean they did something wrong or illegal. 
  • The process of waiting for a decision on an asylum claim usually takes between 3 and 8 years.
  • While asylum seekers are waiting for a decision on their case, they are generally not eligible for federal benefits like social security, unemployment, housing assistance, and food stamps.
  • An asylum applicant must wait 150 days after their asylum application is filed before even applying for a work permit.  Without a work permit, a person is not eligible to work for a US employer. 
  • When a person starts working with an asylum-seeker work permit, they pay taxes on their income, including paying into Social Security. Many asylum-seekers will pay income taxes for over a decade supporting programs they are not eligible to use themselves. 
  • By the time they arrive, most people seeking asylum have spent all of their resources getting to the US. The journey is costly, dangerous, and traumatizing. Almost everyone will be starting their life in the United States completely from scratch.

Why does WMASN call people seeking asylum "friends"?

Have you noticed that when media and politicians talk about our neighbors, they almost always reduce them to their history of having immigrated to the US? They're always talking about "Migrants", "Asylum-seekers", "Undocumented" (or even really nasty words like "illegals"). Meanwhile, when we meet someone new in our community, we usually get know them first as who they are in context: a parent picking their kid up from school, the person in line ahead of us at the grocery store, the person sitting behind us in church, the restaurant owner handing us our dinner. That person might happen to have an immigration process going on, just like the person next to them might happen to have a process in tax court, but that's not always the most important thing about them. A welcoming community sees people as friends first.


​The Western Massachusetts Asylum Support Network is a fiscally sponsored project of the Peace Development Fund
  • Home
  • About
    • About Asylum
  • For Asylum Seekers
    • Pro Se Project
    • Partner Organizations & Resources
  • Get Involved
  • Donate