Building Wellness and Community


Erika Juran | October 9, 2023

Our office, Church World Service (CWS) Harrisburg, which is part of CWS South Central Pennsylvania, has been up and running for about a year and half now. Within that time, we have created strong partnerships and connections to community groups, educational institutions and mental health professionals. Those clients presenting urgent mental health concerns identified during the resettlement period within 90 …

Stories of Change


Najiba, Naser and their daughters in Pennsylvania.

What a Difference a Year Brings

One year ago, Najiba, a young mother of 6-month and 3-year-old girls, was preparing to leave the mountainous hamlet in Afghanistan, where she’d lived her entire life. Left behind would be her widowed mother and a brother who has a disability. Another brother would soon escape to Iraq.

Soon Najiba would be joining her husband, Naser, a security guard for the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, in a desperate attempt to flee Afghanistan before being detained by the Taliban.

The family made it through the chaos at the airport and onto a flight to Qatar. After a short stay in that nation, they arrived in a foreign country — the United States of America. The next few months, the family was in a holding pattern, housed at a military base as they awaited resettlement.

As they waited, the wheels were turning in central Pennsylvania. Three Protestant churches in Mechanicsburg united in September to form a Church World Service Welcome Team. As they were ironing out their organizational structure, they began collecting furniture, household goods and other items for the unknown family they would be supporting.

Meanwhile, Church World Service was hiring staff to open a new office in nearby Harrisburg. In early February, the team learned their family of four would arrive shortly. When Najiba, Naser and their children met members of their welcome team at Harrisburg International Airport on Feb. 5, they became the first sponsored family arranged by the Harrisburg office.

A lot has changed since then. Najiba, who spoke no English when she arrived a year ago, is thriving and happy in her ESL class, with a vocabulary that is growing daily. She’s also provided some family income by baking her delicious flat bread and selling it at festivals.

Naser has just started a new job, having upgraded from the one he landed shortly after arriving in his new hometown, Carlisle. Two weeks ago, Naser passed his driving test on the first try and is planning to soon purchase a car with money saved from his work and donations from the three churches. The eldest daughter excitedly pranced into her first Head Start class in the spring and is eager for the start of the new school year.

Most importantly, Naser and Najiba met with a pro bono immigration lawyer on Monday to sign the federal forms needed to receive Special Immigrant Visas for the family — which will be their pathway to U.S. citizenship.

Despite the sorrow they feel at leaving their families and home village behind, the family has adjusted well to the upheaval in their lives. They have the friendship and support of other Afghans who also settled in Carlisle — as well as the forever support of their friends on their Church World Service Welcome Team. 


Situation Report: Flooding Response in Eastern Kentucky


August 12, 2022

Appeal Code:  Situation Following severe storms and heavy rainfall from late July, eastern Kentucky has been devastated by deadly flooding. Many of these communities were still recovering from recent tornadoes and flooding, making them highly vulnerable during the storms. Today, the American Red Cross reported that about 1,400 homes have been destroyed or severely damaged due to the flooding. The …

A surprise call changes a volunteer’s perspective in Pennsylvania


Rachel Landis | July 27, 2022

The opportunity to volunteer for Church World Service Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, came about suddenly and unexpectedly. I received a call from a friend asking me if I would like to provide transportation to a family arriving from Guatemala that evening. Immediately, I agreed, realizing that it would be a great opportunity to work on my Spanish. My friend and I met …

Stories of Change


Blanche (top photo, right) conducts a public transit orientation system with Carmen and Julio.

Getting Around Greensboro

I remember the first time I used public transportation in Boston. It was a stressful experience. I stared at the touch screen ticket kiosk, not sure where to start as people lined up behind me. Once I got to know how to navigate the system, such as purchasing the ticket and getting off where I wanted, it felt truly liberating and rewarding.

Every person seeking refuge in our country faces the same challenges when it comes to navigating their way around using public transportation. Fortunately, Church World Service understands these challenges and has ways to make it easier for our refugee and asylum seeking clients. Our cultural orientation specialists are ready to help ease the tensions of the first time users of public transportation like newly arrived refugees. Blanche, a CWS cultural orientation specialist in Greensboro, recently went out to meet some clients who had recently arrived from Venezuela. Together, they made things much less difficult.

Carmen and Julio are a couple who, with their son, now call Greensboro home. Greensboro is also nicknamed the “Gate City” and has a better transportation system compared to many other cities in the country. Use of public transportation is key for all new arrivals, but not everyone can know of the modern transit system. Refugees often come from places where their transit system is different from the system here. When I lived in Kenya, the buses would run any time and would stop anywhere. There was only one way to pay, which was cash. In countries like the United States, everyone must follow the transit system and that includes getting onto the bus and off at the bus stops.

As Carmen and Julio leave daily for different appointments such as grocery shopping, community gathering, worshiping and school, they must use the public transportation system to find their way around and learn about their new city. Part of Blanche’s role as a cultural orientation specialist is to lead an orientation about public transportation for new arrivals. She meets them at the bus stop in downtown Greensboro and goes through information on how to get their discount card, what steps they would take to purchase their tickets, how to check the arrival and departure times of the buses and the different routes to get to their English classes, groceries and how to get back home. 

Carmen and Julio are now residents of Greensboro and future citizens of this country. Like many other new Americans, they will depend on public transit systems to connect to the city services and access important resources for several months, or maybe years. CWS orientation specialists are key to facilitating these new challenges, it will make integration easier and accessing resources faster. For the weeks and months to come, Carmen and Julio will be one of those riders in Greensboro contributing to the economy of this city. 

This story was written by Abdi Iftin, CWS Communications Specialist, Welcoming Communities. Originally from Somalia, Abdi lived as a refugee in Kenya for about five years before coming to the United States in 2014.


Stories of Change


Shukria sits in the CWS office in Miami

From Kabul to CWS Case Manager in Miami. Here is the story of Shukria. 

Remember the shocking footage we have all seen on televisions as Kabul fell and Afghans desperately hung onto U.S. military jets for dear life, some dropping to their death? For those of us who watched from afar, the footage was nothing less than a nightmare and a heartbreak. But Shukria was at the airport and remembers the terrifying moments as Afghans tried to flee on departing U.S. jets. “The airport was very crowded, people pushed each other,” recalls Shukria. She was one of the thousands who desperately attempted to leave Afghanistan. Shukria reflects her experience of leaving a beloved home and building a brand-new life here in the U.S. with the help and support of Church World Service in Miami.

Like many other Afghans, it was not a choice for Shukria to leave Afghanistan and seek asylum. It was about safety for her own life and a search for freedom. She knew the new moral code that would emerge under the new Afghanistan leadership would deprive her of the opportunities to continue her computer science studies and contribute to her country. 

Shukria’s life improved a lot as a girl in Afghanistan over the years, despite the daily shelling and violence that continued to tear her country apart. Shukria went to school with many other girls, and she watched Afghan girls play sports. She had seen girls and women become active members in their country. Even some held positions in the government. 

Everything fell apart in one day. She tells us her story in comprehensive English, even including details about the weather in her escape stories. “First we arrived in Qatar. It was a very hot day. It was not a comfortable place to sleep. And not good food,” she says. The crowd grew larger and Shukria was among many Afghans, including women and children, facing uncertainty under the scorching sun at a military base in Qatar.  

From One Military Camp in Qatar to Another one in the United States

It was late 2021 when Shukria finally found herself–along with her sister and a cousin–on a flight to Pennsylvania. Back in Afghanistan were the rest of her family: mom, dad and other siblings. As her plane cruised at altitude from the Qatar airport, Shukria looked down and only imagined the terrifying last second of those fellow Afghans who dropped from airplanes mid-air. Each hour that passed over the Atlantic Ocean brought mixed emotions. For Shukria there were many questions running in her head: how would life in the U.S. be for her? And who will be there to support her? What would she do? 

The two months she stayed in a U.S. military camp here in the United States brought her so much joy as she made new friends from people of different backgrounds, some of whom she would have never met in Afghanistan. Together, they navigated the new life here in the United States. “When you come to a new place, you are not familiar with everything. There are new rules, norms and all…it is not easy to learn all of them at once. It takes time. But I am very happy to be here in Miami,” Shukria told us. 

Working with CWS

“When we arrived here in Miami, we were not familiar with anything. It was only Church World Service that helped us with everything. They showed us some grocery stores. People, cultural orientation… It was very good for us,” Shukria says. 

By late January, Shukria’s ability to speak English fluently and speak both Pashto and Dari immediately became her skills to join the CWS team as a translator. Then she became a case manager. “I go with the Afghan clients when they go to the health departments for medical needs. Sometimes I go with them to the urgent care and besides being a case manager, I also do some translation services,” she says.

When we talked to Shukria in January, there were over 400 Afghans resettled in Miami, some of whom are clients of CWS. Shukria supports other CWS case managers with translation and sometimes with understanding the Afghan culture and traditions. Shukria’s role within CWS in a short period of time has changed many lives, and we can say that she has brought CWS and the Afghan clients closer together. CWS cares so much about the norms and traditions of its clients and bridging any gaps between our staff members and the clients. Shukria herself a client of CWS and now a contributor to the everyday changes that happen in our communities and mostly in our newly arrived Afghan clients as they navigate through their new lives here.

What is Next for Shukria?

Inspired by the services CWS provides to the clients, Shukria sees herself taking up a much bigger role in the future continuing the efforts staff members at CWS had shown. But now Shukria herself is also receiving CWS support in her asylum case. “Hopefully in a few days, my asylum process starts, and then green card and citizenship,” Shukria states with a smile on her face. “One day I want to be another American.”

 Donate here to support other newcomers like Shukria as they find a safe place to call home. 


A New Year for our New Afghan Neighbors


Abdi Iftin | March 18, 2022

On March 20 this year, about 300 million people worldwide will celebrate Nowruz. It’s the festival that marks the Persian new year and the start of Spring, and it is celebrated at the exact moment of the Spring equinox. The United Nations has praised Nowruz for promoting “peace and solidarity” among the many nations who celebrate it. Nowruz is one …

Stories of Change


Top: Pastor Shiryln Thomas. Middle: volunteers from The Baby Stewart Foundation. Bottom: Robert. All photos credit Mountain & Sea Collective.

A Seat at the Master’s table

Have you ever experienced a time when you felt invisible, insignificant or forgotten? For many who are facing homelessness, disaster or other hardship that feeling is a daily reality.

God’s Kingdom and Restoration Ministries in Galveston, Texas is working to change that reality. And they’re doing it one person, one seat and one table at a time.

Four years ago, this Texas church began “The Master’s Table,” where every other month guests are invited to sit at nicely decorated tables to enjoy a home-cooked meal.

The ministry’s focus is on helping people facing hard times. “It was always our vision to feed the needy, feed the working poor, feed the homeless,” said Shiryln Thomas, co-pastor at the church.

And a seat at this table isn’t just about the food. Because of CWS supporters who host offerings, assemble kits and donate blankets, participants like Robert, feel loved and know that God hasn’t forgotten them.

“They gave us these blankets today and we really needed them,” shares Robert. “We are really thankful… Extremely grateful and thankful.”

Thomas says that because of the help of CWS supporters, the guests who enter to dine at the Master’s Table leave filled with food and much more.

“To all the volunteers, the donors of Church World Service: God bless you!,” says Thomas. “You are bringing hope to people that are hopeless. Keep doing what you are doing because you are making a difference.”


Swimming in a Hurricane: My First Six Months as a CWS Employment Specialist


Greg Hansbrough | February 16, 2022

I walk through the office doors of the CWS Durham office, in the basement of a large church in downtown, breathing a sigh of relaxation as I begin my day as an employment specialist in helping resettle refugees. After unlocking the door to the large, bull-pen style office, I feel myself smile while turning on the lights and quietly sitting …

Six Months After the Fall of Kabul: Welcoming Afghans in Durham, North Carolina


February 14, 2022

On Monday, August 15, 2021, the world watched as the Taliban officially captured Kabul. That day was the culmination of their sweeping takeover of Afghanistan. Almost overnight, countless Afghans feared for their lives under the new regime. In the weeks that followed, a massive humanitarian airlift evacuated tens of thousands of Afghans to third countries and eventually to the United …