Last week at Outreach we called a woman to see if she could come to the office for an appointment to get help with her rent. She immediately said that we were an answer to her prayer and that she had just finished reading her Bible when the phone rang. Earlier she had been looking for our phone number to call us and find out the status of her two-week-old request. She was obviously a woman of great faith. During that phone call and when we met with her on Thursday morning, she shared many challenges in her life and how God is helping her find a way through them, including medical issues and the deaths of family members. She expressed being lonely and was grateful that we listened when she shared her story. The two of us who spoke with her were equally blessed by her deep faith!
In the Beginning - An Origin Story
From the St. Vincent de Paul Society
I used to assume that the St. Vincent de Paul Society must have been started by the famous saint himself, but that’s not the story at all!
St. Vincent and St. Louise de Marillac lived a few centuries before (in the 1600s) the Society’s founder, Frédéric Ozanam, was a student at the Sorbonne. Frédéric was challenged to “walk the talk” when he spoke of the church’s involvement in serving the poor in the mid-1800s. Most of the serving was done by religious orders…. His critics jeered “Show us YOUR works!” He was guided by a Daughter of Charity, Sr. Rosalie Rendu, who lived the virtues she espoused and she guided Frédéric and his friends in how to serve the corporal needs of those living in poverty before trying to speak of spiritual conversion.
Frédéric named the Society after the saint who was his best example of Christian charity and today, there are millions of Vincentians worldwide. The blessings of serving people in need of help and hope and the fellowship and support in our confraternity make SVdP a The Society’s members seek to emulate these five virtues: Simplicity, Humility, Gentleness, Selflessness, and Zeal.
Shortly before his death at 40, Frédéric observed that “Our Little Society has grown large enough to be a providential fact”.
- Huddie Murray
If you'd like to find out more about the Society at St. Austin’s, please contact Huddie at
Born - April 23, 1813, Milan, Kingdom of Italy Died - September 8, 1853, Marseilles, France Beatified - August 22, 1997 Feast - September 9 Patron of Politicians, Economists, Social Workers, Teachers, Journalists, Criminologists, Anthropologists, Historians, Geographers, Environmentalists
May 1, 2022
From St. Vincent de Paul
The Vincentian Family Center
Vincentian Family Center, 901 W. Braker Lane, Austin, TX 78758
The Vincentian Family Center serves as a "hub" for several services of the Diocesan Society of St. Vincent de Paul.
Tuesday through Friday, from 9 - noon, Client Services provides bus passes, snack bags, and on Tuesdays and Thursdays, nursing students from UT address health needs.
Each Saturday morning, holidays included, the Food Pantry is open from 9 a.m. - noon. Nearly 300 families are served weekly!
The St. Vincent de Paul Store is open from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday each week. Economical prices can be found on clothing, household goods, books, toys, furniture, and even new beds!
The Society could use a few good volunteers. Please click the link below in case you are interested!
Perhaps your student needs a few more service hours for school or Confirmation?
Perhaps you have recently retired and need a focus for your new found "freedom"?
Perhaps you just feel the need to give back! Whatever the reason, please consider this opportunity.
The Society does so much to alleviate need in this City. Your financial support is always appreciated, but your presence will be cherished!
The Gabriel Project
Provides More Opportunities to Give
April 22, 2022
Honor this Earth Day, Reduce your Carbon Footprint
Happy Earth Day! As we celebrate new life in Christ and the beauty of creation this Easter season, take some time to find one or two new ways to reduce your carbon footprint. Here are some ideas to get you started.
Transportation
Drive less. Walk, bike, or use public transportation when possible and consolidate your errands into fewer trips.
When you drive, avoid unnecessary braking and acceleration. Keep your tires properly inflated, maintain your car, and remove unnecessary items adding extra weight.
Avoid flying. If you must fly, fly economy class and fly non-stop since landings and takeoffs use more fuel and produce more emissions.
Around the house
Seek out and use plastic-free alternatives to everything from snack and produce bags to toothbrushes to laundry detergent. Plastic is rarely actually recycled (even when you put it in the recycling bin), and it ends up everywhere - the ocean, harming wildlife, and in people's bloodstream.
Don’t rinse dishes before putting them in the dishwasher, just scrape off any excess food first. Then, make sure it’s full before running it on the economy setting.
Use cold water to wash your clothes and line dry them.
Use reusable beverage containers made of glass or steel rather than single-use plastics.
Reduce the distance your food is shipped by growing herbs and vegetables at home.
Shopping
Consume less. Opt for quality rather than quantity to cut down your carbon footprint. Make a statement with your purchases by supporting companies that are taking action to reduce their environmental impact.
Avoid fast fashion. Cheap clothes contribute to more than 15 million tons of textile waste produced each year. These companies also tend to engage in exploitative labor practices.
Avoid buying products with excessive packaging.
Get Involved!
Purchase carbon offsets. A carbon offset is an amount of money you can pay for a project that reduces greenhouse gases somewhere else. If you offset one ton of carbon, the offset will help capture or destroy one ton of greenhouse gases that would otherwise have been released into the atmosphere.
Become politically active and let your representatives know you want them to take action to phase out fossil fuels use and decarbonize the country as fast as possible.
Calculate your carbon footprint at carbonfootprint.com to find out how you’re doing. The EPA’s carbon footprint calculator can show how much carbon and money you will save by taking certain steps.
Help St. Austin start a Creation Care Team. If you're interested, contact Kristen.
Living Out Our Catholic Teaching
A Call from the St. Vincent de Paul Society
"Now is the time for a new 'creativity' in charity, not only by ensuring that help is effective, but also by 'getting close' to those who suffer, so that the hand that helps is seen not as a humiliating handout but as a sharing between brothers and sisters. We must therefore ensure that in every Christian community the poor feel at home."
That reminder from Catholic Social Teaching is what our St. Vincent de Paul Society tries to live out every day in our ministry. As we contemplate returning to in-person Home Visits,thisbecomes even truer. Does this speak to you? Would you like to join us or even just check us out?
Your generosity to our Persons in Need second collection on the first weekend of every month supports the work of our SVdP Society and on Outreach Ministry.
This photo eloquently captures but one of many moments when the people of St. Austin bring God's Word, His Love, to our time and place.
April 17, 2022
St. Vincent de Paul Society Helping Those In Need
Recent Vincentian Work
Our Vincentian mission leads us to meet all kinds of folks from many walks of life. We were able to provide some rent and utility assistance, as well as diapers - thanks, to the Gabriel Project - for a single mom with a 14-month-old who is trying to juggle work and childcare. We assisted a homeless young man now sleeping in his car who clings to his phone in hopes of landing a job by paying his phone bill and supplied him with an HEB card for some food. We helped with rent and a food card for a middle-aged couple whose medical insurance has skyrocketed from less than $100 to over $350 per month! We can't fix all the problems that these folks are faced with, but more than the money spent on their needs, they appreciate our listening ears and loving hearts. Would you like to see what our Vincentian work is about? If so, please contact Huddie at [email protected].
Immigration & Border Security
Prayers for Adam, Immigrants, &
Border Security Personnel
As we conclude our immigration series this Lent, we seek to better understand Catholic Church teachings on immigration, particularly as they relate to border security. In debates on this issue, the people who are entrusted with the difficult task of defending our southern border are often overlooked.
The bishops of the U.S. and Mexico wrote a pastoral letter on immigration titled Strangers No Longer, Together on the Journey of Hope in 2003. In the letter, they examine Catholic church teaching with regards to migration and articulate five principles that emerge:
Persons have the right to find opportunities in their homeland.
Persons have the right to migrate to support themselves and their families.
Sovereign nations have the right to control their borders.
Refugees and asylum seekers should be afforded protection.
The human dignity and human rights of undocumented migrants should be respected.
Regarding the third principle, the letter further states, “The Church recognizes the right of sovereign nations to control their territories but rejects such control when it is exerted merely for the purpose of acquiring additional wealth. More powerful economic nations, which have the ability to protect and feed their residents, have a stronger obligation to accommodate migration flows” (paragraph 36). It is clear that the United States is among the more powerful economic nations that the letter enjoins to take a greater role in accepting migrants. We as Catholics believe that our nation is faced with balancing this call to welcome migrants with our need for national security. Along with the migrants who arrive at our shores, Border Patrol agents are often at the crossroads and bear the brunt of this ongoing tension.
A Prayer to Reach Across all Borders
Lord of All, Some of us make our homes on hills, others in valleys. Some in tall buildings, some on shorelines, some at risk on the street. And we divide up our patches with lines we scratch into the ground And call them borders. Where the lines don’t suffice, we build fences. Where fences fail, we dig moats. Where moats aren’t enough, we erect walls. But what if we were to look across these borders? Across fence, moat, and wall And see you on the other side? Lord, teach us to reach across all borders, Fabricated or natural, To join with all our brothers and sisters To unify, and not separate. To honor all who wander Seeking hope, seeking opportunity—seeking you As assuredly as we seek you Lord, let no border ring our hearts. May we find a place within them for all. Turn our hands from building walls Toward building justice. Stretch our arms across fence, wall and moat To seek out those on the other side That we might find you in each other’s eyes In each other’s hands In each other’s wounds. Amen
Beyond praying and learning, consider preparing a mindful meatless meal as Lent comes to it's close in the next few days. As New Mexico is a border state, we offer a recipe for New Mexican Green Chile Stew (vegan), paired with a traditional bread of the Navajo and other native peoples.
Border Security
The men and women stationed at our southern border experience a variety of challenges. With each surge in the number of migrants crossing the border, U.S. Border Patrol regularly must divert large percentages of its agents away from its primary mission of border security. The surges lead agents to take on a humanitarian mission: feeding and providing medical care for migrants, etc., and take them away from the border security they were hired to do. Border agents are not always trained in or prepared for the humanitarian tasks, which can cause both morale issues and lead to lead to the mistreatment of migrants, even unwittingly.
Detaining the extremely high number of migrants coming to our southern border creates overcrowding and some inhumane conditions, both in Border Patrol facilities (designed like police stations) and in ICE’s longer-term custody facilities. Addressing the humanitarian needs of large numbers of migrants takes away from Border Patrol agents fulfilling their primary duties, and the at times inhumane conditions of people in their charge can be difficult for these agents to witness.
The challenges of migrant surges are compounded by the fact that Border Patrol agent positions are chronically under-staffed. The constant flow of migrants into the U.S. can take a heavy emotional toll on the men and women who seek to protect our nation. Although they are not Border Patrol agents, we continue to hear in the news about the poor living conditions, gear shortages, and multiple suicides among Texas National Guard members stationed on the border as part of Operation Lone Star.
The lack of training, inhumane conditions migrants are kept in, and the emotional toll on Border Patrol agents negatively affects the dignity of their work, another principle of Catholic Social Teaching. As the USCCB notes, “Work is more than a way to make a living; it is a form of continuing participation in God’s creation.” It also includes the right to productive work. Obviously respecting the dignity of migrants and offering them human conditions is vital. One could also argue that witnessing and sometimes participating in either the direct inhumane treatment or the system that treats migrants inhumanely undermines the dignity of Border Patrol agents as well as the dignity of their work.
We pray and are tasked with working for a better immigration system in our nation, one that welcomes the stranger, treats migrants humanely, secures our borders, and respects the dignity of the border patrol agents and the work they do. Let us also remember in our prayers “Adam”, all other migrants, and all those who work to secure our borders (Adam is the Afghan man that St. Austin is legally sponsoring to help reunite him with his family in the U.S.).
Green Chile Stew &
Navaho Fry Bread - click below
Unaccompanied Migrant Children & Statistics
Prayers for Adam & Unaccompanied Migrant Children
In continuing our immigration series this Lent, we seek to better understand the plight of a particularly vulnerable group: unaccompanied migrant children, legally termed “unaccompanied alien children.” It's hard to imagine the circumstances that would force parents to choose to leave their child behind and send for them later or to send their child alone to another country in hopes of a better life. Some unaccompanied children have lost their families to civil conflict, acts of violence, and natural disasters. Vulnerable and scared, these children who migrate alone in search of safe haven are often easy prey for smugglers, traffickers, and other criminals.
This past weekend in El Salvador, there wassurge in gang violence that killed more than 80 people. Based on the population of El Salvador (6.4 million) and the City of Austin (960,000), a comparable event would be if 12 people were murdered in Austin in a single weekend. To give those numbers some context, Austin saw 89 murders in all of 2021, and last year was a record high. The fact that this level of violence is not an isolated incident in the Northern Triangle (El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala) helps explain some of the difficult choices that Central American parents make for their children.
Why are these children forced to flee their home countries?
The Northern Triangle (El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala) is one of the most dangerous regions in the world. All three countries have consistently ranked amongst the top 20 most dangerous countries in the world. Although the murder rate in El Salvador has declined since 2015, it continues to have one of the highest homicide rates in the world. Violence that threatens the lives of citizens in the Northern Triangle—coupled with lack of state protection—is a primary factor propelling the migration of children and youth from their countries of origin. The violence children encounter takes many forms, including sexual assault and coercive recruitment by gang members, and domestic and interfamilial violence.
What does the Catholic Church say about unaccompanied migrant children?
“Among migrants, children constitute the most vulnerable group, because as they face the life ahead of them, they are invisible and voiceless: their precarious situation deprives them of documentation, hiding them from the world’s eyes; the absence of adults to accompany them prevents their voices from being raised and heard.” –Pope Francis, 2017 World Day of Migrants and Refugees Message, September 8, 2016
The Catholic Church’s work in assisting unaccompanied migrant children stems from the belief that every person has a unique and sacred dignity and that we must help protect and defend the vulnerable.
The protection of migrant children is an especially important issue for the Catholic Church as one of Jesus’ first experiences as an infant was to flee for his life from King Herod with his family to Egypt.
While the Catholic Church recognizes governments’ right to control their borders and enforce immigration laws, we hold a strong and pervasive pastoral interest in the welfare and humane treatment of unaccompanied children.
The Church recognizes the extreme violence and persecution that children are facing and seeks to ensure their safety and well-being.
The USCCB’s website Justice for Immigrants offers key recommendations to impove the plight of unaccompanied migrant children. (link “Justice for Immigrants”)
Although “Adam” doesn’t have the vulnerability of being a child in his journey to the U.S., we know that he and his family have also fled violence in his home country. (Adam is the Afghan man St. Austin is legally sponsoring to help reunite him with his family in the U.S.) We pray for Adam and his family as they patiently wait for a decision on his legal case. Let’s add to our prayers the many, many unaccompanied migrant children who are also waiting to be reunified with their family members in the United States as well as the victims of the killings in El Salvador last weekend and their families.
A Mindful Meatless Meal In Solidarity with Unaccompanied Immigrant Children
We pray for peace and an end to the violence that brings so many unaccompanied migrant children to our borders. Since the vast majority of unaccompanied children come from the Northern Triangle, we offer this recipe for a meatless meal of Cheese Pupusas with Red Salsa from El Salvador (curtesy of Catholic Relief Services) as a pathway of compassion.
Who qualifies as an unaccompanied alien child (UAC) where do they come from?
“Unaccompanied alien children” (UAC) are defined in U.S. law as children who cross our borders and (1) have no lawful immigration status in the United States, (2) have not attained 18 years of age, and (3) have no parent or legal guardian in the United States or no parent or legal guardian in the United States who is available to provide for their care and physical custody. According to the U.S Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), in FY 2021, UAC came from: Guatemala (47%), El Salvador (13%); Honduras (32%); and other (8%).
What Happens once unaccompanied migrant children arrive in the United States?
Unaccompanied migrant children are typically apprehended by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) then transferred to the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). They are also placed in removal proceedings and issued a “Notice to Appear” in immigration court.
As soon as children enter ORR care, they are put in contact with their parents, guardians or relatives, if known, and the process of finding a suitable sponsor begins. The vast majority of sponsors are a parent or a close family relative living in the United States. While ORR programs are looking for sponsors, children are provided age-appropriate care and wraparound services in one of the approximately 200 statelicensed facilities and programs in 22 states funded by ORR.
How many unaccompanied migrant children arrive in the United States?
For the first nine years of the Unaccompanied Children (UC) Program, managed by ORR, fewer than 8,000 children were served each year. Since Fiscal Year 2012 (October 1, 2011 – September 30, 2012), this number has jumped dramatically. In the past three years, the program received 69,488 UC referrals in FY 2019, 15,381 in FY 2020, and 122,731 in FY 2021. The numbers vary widely and are often staggering. Because of the large fluctuations in arrival numbers throughout the year and across years, ORR maintains a mix of “standard” beds that are available year-round, and “temporary” beds that can be added or reduced as needed. The facilities housing “temporary” beds are sometimes called “influx” facilities. While the USCCB recognizes that these facilities are may be necessary at certain times, they support improved child protection standards and oversight.
A Prayer for Immigrant Children
Loving Father, in your infinite compassion, we seek your divine protection for refugee children who are often alone and afraid. Provide solace to those who have been witnesses to violence and destruction, who have lost parents, family, friends, home, and all they cherish due to war or persecution. Comfort them in their sorrow, and bring help in their time of need. Show mercy to unaccompanied migrant children, too, Lord. Reunite them with their families and loved ones. Guide those children who are strangers in a foreign land to a place of peace and safety. Comfort them in their sorrow, and bring help in their time of need. Show us how we might reach out to these precious and vulnerable children. Open our hearts to migrant and refugee children in need, so that we might see in them your own migrant Son. Give us courage to stand up in their defense against those who would do them harm. For this we pray through our Lord Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, forever and ever. Amen.
Although last week covered refugees, because of its timeliness, we want to remember that the late Madeleine Albright, who passed away on Wednesday, was a refugee from what was then Czechoslovakia. You can find out more about her life and legacy as the first female secretary of state here. Her story is an important reminder of the many important contributions that immigrants make to this country, regardless of where they came from or how they got here.
Prayers for Adam and Persons Subject to Human Trafficking
During this fourth week of Lent, we continue to pray for “Adam,” the Afghan man who St. Austin is legally sponsoring to help reunite him with his family in the United States. Another subject often closely tied to immigration is human trafficking, which sometimes involves crossing national boundaries. Each year, thousands of vulnerable men, women and children are trafficked across our borders and then forced into slavery. Many are fleeing terrible situations in their home countries, and come to the United States to find a better life. Unfortunately, the nightmare for these vulnerable persons often begins when they reach our shores.
A Prayer for Victims of Human Trafficking
God of liberation, we pray for all your children who are enslaved by human trafficking. Free them from their bondage, heal them of their wounds, protect them from further harm, turn the hearts of their oppressors, and sustain them with hope for a new beginning in safety and peace. Amen.
We often assume that trafficking only impacts certain types of individuals, such as those living in abject poverty with little to no access to education. While certain factors do make some populations exceptionally vulnerable to human trafficking, there is no “typical” profile. Anyone can become a victim regardless of sex, age, race, citizenship status, socioeconomic level or educational attainment. Understanding that no one is immune to victimization allows us to improve prevention and victim identification strategies.
Although we are focusing on immigration this Lent, it’s important to recognize that trafficking can occur within a victim’s home country or even their own community. Under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (TVPA), you do not have to be transported from one country to another, or even cross state lines, to be considered a victim of human trafficking. The TVPA protects both foreign born nationals and U.S. citizens who are survivors of a severe form of trafficking. Learn the truth about other common myths here.
What is Human Trafficking?
The United Nations defines human trafficking as “the recruitment, transportation, harboring or receipt of persons by means of force, fraud or coercion…for the purpose of exploitation.” Almost every nation is affected by this form of modern-day slavery, as a country of origin, transit or destination for victims—the United States is no exception.
The United States Department of Justice classifies human trafficking into two major categories: sex trafficking and labor trafficking. Those trafficked are of all ages, races, ethnicities, nationalities, religions, genders, sexual orientations, socioeconomic backgrounds and citizenship statuses. Traffickers can be anyone, including family members, intimate partners, business owners and community leaders. Trafficking occurs in various industries, such as restaurants, massage parlors, hotels, factories, domestic services, child care, health care and sexually oriented businesses.
Human trafficking is considered a low risk and highly lucrative illegal enterprise for a number of reasons:
the hidden nature of the crime
lax enforcement of anti-trafficking laws
the ease with which victims can be re-exploited
large demand
Calculated as a $150 BILLION industry, modern day slavery has become the fastest growing source of illicit profit for criminals worldwide.
What Does the Catholic Church say about Human Trafficking?
“Human trafficking is a crime against all humanity. We must unite our efforts to free victims and stop this crime.” -Pope Francis
Catholic social teaching proclaims the dignity of the human person and the sanctity of all human life. Each person is made in God’s image, is loved immeasurably by God, and has inherent worth. Every person is precious, people are more important than possessions, and the measure of every institution is whether it threatens or enhances the life and dignity of the human person. Because every life is a gift from God and is sacred, it deserves to be protected and nurtured; we each have a responsibility to fight against the violation and degradation of our brothers and sisters. Learn more about Catholic Social Teaching and how it pertains to human trafficking on the USCCB website.
Adam and his family patiently wait for a decision on his legal case. While we can’t take any further action to help him right now, we can learn more about human trafficking, including saving the National Human Trafficking Hotline number in our phones: 1-888-373-7888. The Anti-Trafficking InternationalandPolaris Project are great places to get started. Let’s also pray for the more than 14.5 million victims of human trafficking worldwide.
A Mindful Meatless Meal - In Solidarity with Human Trafficking Victims
We pray for the millions and millions of victims of human trafficking around the world. Although victims are exploited across the globe, this week we remember in a special way the many human trafficking victims from all over Asia. We offer recipes for meatless Filipino dishes, Ampalaya con Itlog and Kangkong & Tofu in Oyster Sauceas a pathway of compassion.
As we enter into the third week of Lent, we continue to pray for “Adam,” the Afghan man who St. Austin is legally sponsoring to help reunite him with his family in the United States. We continue to learn about the plight of many migrants. Refugees are another type of immigrants who come to the United States after fleeing their homelands.
The Catholic Church in the United States cares deeply about the plight of refugees around the world and advocates for and participates in their resettlement in the United States.
Let’s all continue to pray for Adam and his family as they await a decision on his legal case. Please also hold in prayer the world’s more than 26.6 million refugees.
Prayer for Migrants & Refugees
Lord Jesus, when you multiplied the loaves and fishes, you provided more than food for the body, you offered us the gift of yourself, the gift which satisfies every hunger and quenches every thirst! Your disciples were filled with fear and doubt, but you poured out your love and compassion on the migrant crowd, welcoming them as brothers and sisters.
Lord Jesus, today you call us to welcome the members of God's family who come to our land to escape oppression, poverty, persecution, violence, and war. Like your disciples, we too are filled with fear and doubt and even suspicion. We build barriers in our hearts and in our minds.
Lord Jesus, help us by your grace,
To banish fear from our hearts, that we may embrace each of your children as our own brother and sister;
To welcome migrants and refugees with joy and generosity, while responding to their many needs;
To realize that you call all people to your holy mountain to learn the ways of peace and justice;
To share of our abundance as you spread a banquet before us;
To give witness to your love for all people, as we celebrate the many gifts they bring.
We praise you and give you thanks for the family you have called together from so many people. We see in this human family a reflection of the divine unity of the one Most Holy Trinity in whom we make our prayer: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Amen.
We pray for the millions and millions of refugees around the world. We remember in a special way, Adam and the many refugees from Afghanistan, Syria, the Middle East, and the African continent. We offer recipe for an Ethopian meatless meal as a pathway of compassion.
What’s the difference between a refugee and an asylum seeker?
Like an asylum seeker, a refugee is any person unable to return to their home country out of a well-founded fear of persecution because of their race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group. The refugee resettlement system protects certain persons of special humanitarian concern to the United States who meet the refugee definition, are outside the United States, are taking refuge in a country outside of their home country, and are referred for U.S. refugee resettlement. A main difference is where the person is currently located. Asylum seekers must be in the U.S. or at a U.S. point of entry, while refugees are in a country that is not the United States or their home country.
Some people say that the process for admitting refugees to the United States is not secure and terrorists can easily enter the country. Is that true?
Fewer than 1% of all refugees worldwide are even considered for resettlement. If referred to the U.S. program, refugees undergo biographic and fingerprint security checks to confirm their identity. They are also extensively interviewed by specially trained officers from DHS’ U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The vetting process is designed to ensure that each incoming refugee is not a public safety or national security risk. Ultimately, if our government has concerns that an applicant is a threat or safety risk, that refugee will not be admitted to the United States.
Can you work in the U.S. or become a U.S. citizen if you are classified as a refugee, asylee, or asylum seeker?
Refugees and asylees have work authorization granted to them immediately, as part of their status, when they become refugees or asylees, and they can then apply for an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) as further evidence of that authorization. Asylum seekers cannot apply for a work permit until 150 days after they have applied for asylum. If there is still no decision, they can apply at the 150 day mark, although USCIS cannot issue an EAD until 180 days without an asylum decision.
A refugee may apply for a green card one year after their arrival to the United States. An asylee may apply for a green card one year after being granted asylum in the United States. Either can apply for U.S. citizenship after having a green card for five years.