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Kate Rice went looking for unity in this polarized nation. And she found it in a surprising issue. Refugee resettlement. And she found it in surprising places. Like Mitch McConnell's back yard. Throughout the Bible Belt. In deep red states. In the rural West, where cowboys drive pickup trucks with gun racks. She found Trump voters working with Hillary and Bernie voters. Pro-lifers working with pro-choicers. The religious working with the secular. This is a how-to of hope. It shows anyone moved by the plight of refugees, asylum seekers and the desperate families trapped at our borders what they…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Kate Rice went looking for unity in this polarized nation. And she found it in a surprising issue. Refugee resettlement. And she found it in surprising places. Like Mitch McConnell's back yard. Throughout the Bible Belt. In deep red states. In the rural West, where cowboys drive pickup trucks with gun racks. She found Trump voters working with Hillary and Bernie voters. Pro-lifers working with pro-choicers. The religious working with the secular. This is a how-to of hope. It shows anyone moved by the plight of refugees, asylum seekers and the desperate families trapped at our borders what they can do, right now, to help. And they're getting that help from the experts: everyday Americans working in the trenches of helping our newest arrivals. This book is jam-packed with case studies of how communities across the nation are bringing scaleability to helping our newest arrivals. And these templates will work not just with helping refugees--both the few still arriving and the many who are already here--but in helping asylum seekers and any other groups in need. These groups are doing everything from greeting new arrivals at airports to lobbying their government representatives to return our nation's policies to a nation that offers freedom and liberty to all. Refugee resettlement is not blue or red. It's American. The book covers a national movement that's not just in blue states but in the Bible Belt and other red states where evangelicals and other religious conservatives are taking the words of the Bible literally and treating the foreigner as their neighbor, and that neighbor as their brother or sister. These are people seeking to live the words of the Bible in Matthew, John, and Leviticus by helping the very refugees the Trump administration seeks to keep out of the country. And in doing so they are reaching out to the community beyond their church doors. The result: Trump voters and Clinton voters, pro-lifers and pro-choicers, the religious and the secular are leaving their political comfort zones to work in solidarity to support refugees here in the U.S. It's a grassroots movement flying beneath the radar of professional prognosticators and armchair political junkies. In an era in which this nation seems increasingly polarized, barricading themselves in political bunkers on the left and the right, there are some chinks in the walls so many of us seem to be hiding behind. So check your stereotypes at the door and start reading!
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Autorenporträt
Kate Rice is a prize-winning travel industry reporter turned refugee resettlement volunteer. She is an enthusiastic traveler, runner, skier, bookworm, java junkie, rock 'n roll singer and Green Bay Packer fan. Rice is the adoring mother of two wonderful young women and is from a purple-to-red corner of Wisconsin. She now lives in New York City, gateway for generations of immigrants and refugees. Among them: her great-great grandparents, who fled starvation and persecution in Ireland. Ann Rice and John Rice were married in St. Brigid's Church on Tompkins Square Park in New York City's East Village in 1853, and then followed the railroad to Wisconsin. She is an American who has learned that to be a citizen of this great country is both a gift and a responsibility.