Tamara Upfal serves as a Legislative Assistant at the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, where her portfolio includes immigration justice and refugee rights, separation of church and state, and international religious freedom.
The Faithful Fight Toolkit: Welcoming the Stranger
- May 1, 2025

Welcoming the stranger, or immigrant, is a core part of Jewish tradition, mentioned 36 times in the Torah. Leviticus commands, “The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens; you shall love them as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt” (19:33-34). Our own people’s history as “strangers” reminds us of the many struggles faced by immigrants today and we affirm our commitment to create the same opportunities for today’s immigrants that were so valuable to our own community not so many years ago. In the words of HIAS, the world’s oldest refugee protection agency, “We used to help refugees because they were Jewish; now we help refugees because we are Jewish.”
Our Jewish tradition also explicitly models what it means to welcome as opposed to simply permit one to enter. We read in Genesis that not only did Abraham and Sarah allow three guests to enter their tent but they ran towards them and prepared them a meal, modeling the spirit with which we should embrace those seeking refuge. The rabbis teach that Abraham and Sarah’s tent was open on all sides. To welcome is not to simply admit someone, but to meet them with open arms.
In the United States today, the value of welcoming the stranger is under threat – and our neighbors are facing unprecedented attacks from the federal government. This multifaceted attack has included:
- Shutting down refugee resettlement programs.
- An unconstitutional attempt to end birthright citizenship.
- The end of long standing policies to identify houses of worship, schools, and hospitals as “sensitive locations” that are safe from ICE raids and other immigration enforcement.
- Executive orders targeting nonprofits that help immigrants.
- Threats to prosecute people for sharing constitutionally-protected “know your rights” information.
- Mass deportations – including to the controversial detention center at Guantanamo Bay.
The frequency and intensity of these attacks are designed to overwhelm us and make us feel powerless. But we are not powerless. We are pushing back – and protecting our neighbors.
This toolkit is part of the Faithful Fight series, developed in partnership with the Horizons Project. This toolkit is part of the Faithful Fight series, developed in partnership with the Horizons Project.
An interfaith response
Americans of different religious beliefs and political ideologies are joining together to protect immigrants and to defend the rule of law. Earlier this year, a multi-faith group of leaders – including major Catholic, Lutheran, Evangelical, Jewish, and Muslim organizations – joined together to say, “We stand united as people of faith in our commitments to welcome the stranger and to care for the most vulnerable – commitments rooted in our common understanding of our Creator’s love for all and call to serve our neighbors.”
Statements are important, but they are only the beginning. Faith leaders and organizations across the country are working together with a broad coalition to take concrete actions, including:
- A renewed sanctuary movement that provides protection to individuals who may be targeted for deportation.
- A lawsuit joined by 27 faith denominations and associations to challenge the rescission of a longstanding “sensitive locations” policy that strictly limited ICE from immigration enforcement actions in houses of worship.
- Organized lobbying and outreach efforts to tell Congress to protect refugees, asylees, and immigrants including:
- Holding the administration accountable to respecting the rule of law by following court orders and upholding legislation passed by Congress to protect those fleeing persecution and violence.
- Robustly funding efforts to strengthen communities welcoming immigrants and refugees and rejecting efforts to expand funding for detention, deportation, and border militarization.
- Urging the administration to respect religious communities’ right to welcome immigrants.
- Providing material support to refugee resettlement nonprofits and immigrant-serving organizations.
We stand united as people of faith in our commitments to welcome the stranger and to care for the most vulnerable – commitments rooted in our common understanding of our Creator’s love for all and call to serve our neighbors.
Toolkit for welcoming the stranger
Toolkit for welcoming the stranger
Stay connected
Sign up to receive updates as we release new toolkits and develop additional resources for faith communities standing together for democracy.
Related Content
It can happen here.
We can stop it.
Defeating authoritarianism is going to take all of us. Everyone and every institution has a role to play. Together, we can protect democracy.
Donate
Sign Up for Updates Sign Up for Updates
Explore Careers Explore Careers
How to Protect Democracy How to Protect Democracy