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Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, turn to faith amid deportation fears

Jean-Michel Gisnel cries out while praying with other congregants at the First Haitian Evangelical Church of Springfield
Jean-Michel Gisnel cries out while praying with other congregants at the First Haitian Evangelical Church of Springfield on Sunday.
(Luis Andres Henao / Associated Press)

At the end of his Sunday service, the pastor of the First Haitian Evangelical Church of Springfield, Ohio, asked ushers and musicians to form a circle around him as he knelt in prayer, flanked by the flags of Haiti and the United States.

Many had come to receive his blessing and hear his guidance on how to deal with federal agents in case of raids stemming from President Trump’s crackdown on immigration. Other congregants stayed home out of fear and growing uncertainty.

“I asked God to protect my people,” the Rev. Reginald Silencieux said after the service, reflecting on his final prayer. “I prayed especially for the Haitian community, and I prayed for USA too, because Trump is our president. As a church, we have an obligation to pray for him because he’s our political leader right now.”

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Some of Springfield’s estimated 15,000 Haitians are seeking solace and divine intervention in their churches or at shops that sell spiritual products. Community leaders say many are overwhelmed by fears Trump will end or let expire the Temporary Protected Status program that allows them to remain in the U.S. legally.

The 1,500 migrants living in this Mexico City encampment face hard choices with President Trump in office.

“The community is panicking.” said Viles Dorsainvil, the leader of Springfield’s Haitian Community Help and Support Center. “They see the arrests on TV in other parts of the country and they don’t know what’s going to happen.”

“The majority of immigrants in the USA are not criminals, and they’re hard-working people,” he added. “Any administration with common sense would rather work with those kinds of immigrants than deport them.”

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Last year, Trump falsely accused Haitians in Springfield of eating their neighbor’s cats and dogs. The false rumors exacerbated fears about division and anti-immigrant sentiment in the mostly white, blue-collar city of about 59,000.

In the weeks after Trump’s comments, schools, government buildings and the homes of elected officials in Springfield were targeted with dozens of bomb threats.

“Before, we had a different type of fear — it was a fear of retaliation, whether it was the far right, the Proud Boys,” said Jacob Payen, a Haitian community leader and owner of Milokan Botanica, a religious shop that sells Haitian spiritual and natural healing products.

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For many Haitian immigrants, Sunday mornings in Springfield, Ohio, are spent joyfully worshipping God as they sing and pray in their native Creole.

“Now, there’s a fear of deportation. That keeps a lot of people from going out and has caused a lot of people to have left,” he said, pointing to the usually busy commercial plaza where his business is located and that was now more quiet than usual.

Between selling religious candles and spiritual ointments, Payne guided customers with immigration forms, employment authorization cards and questions on their TPS applications.

Brutus Joseph, 50, who works installing solar panels, said he came to the botanica to find spiritual relief. But he also wanted to speak his mind.

“I don’t feel right at all. I have a lot in my chest,” Joseph said in Creole through an interpreter. “My wife and I can’t even sleep because we’re so worried. We’re law-abiding citizens — all we did is to be Haitian. We didn’t think we’d be treated like this by the [Trump] administration. I’m praying to God that the president changes his mind.”

Joseph especially worries about the future for his five children, including one who is a senior in high school in Springfield and plans to attend college this year.

“If I leave here, there’s no future for my children. My children can get raped and killed if I go back [to Haiti], so I have everything to lose,” he said, making an appeal to Trump as a fellow family man who is married to an immigrant.

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Haitian leader says Trump administration decisions to freeze aid programs, deport migrants and block refugees will be ‘catastrophic’ for Haiti.

The Rev. Philomene Philostin, one of the pastors at the First Haitian Evangelical Church, bemoaned the lower-than-usual attendance at Sunday’s service.

“They don’t have to be scared. They have to be alert,” she said. “They shouldn’t be scared to the point where they don’t come to church.”

The migration concerns of clergy and other community members in Springfield are shared by many faith leaders nationwide. In several cities, including New York, Philadelphia and Portland, Oregon, interfaith groups are discussing how to provide security and support to migrants in their communities, including those who are undocumented.

During his first administration, Trump used bluntly vulgar language to question why the U.S. would accept immigrants from Haiti and “s—hole countries” in Africa. His 2024 campaign focused heavily on illegal immigration, often referring in his speeches to crimes committed by migrants.

Thousands of Haitian migrants have legally landed in Springfield in recent years under the TPS program, as longstanding unrest in their home country has given way to  violent gangs ruling the streets.

Haitians in Springfield are not the only ones feeling threatened in the wake of false accusations that they are eating their neighbors’ pets. Across town, people are anxious about what’s next.

“Everything changed because Trump is president. People are scared right now. Most are staying in their homes — they don’t want to go outside,” said Romane Pierre, 41, who settled in Springfield in 2020 under the TPS program after fleeing violence in his native Haiti.

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“I love my country, but you can’t live there; it’s terrible right now,” said Pierre, who works at the Rose Gaute, a popular Haitian restaurant in Springfield. “So where do you go back to?”

With the rest of his family still in the Haitian capital of Port-Au-Prince, his 8-year-old daughter got ill last year in the middle of the night. Gunshots rang out in their neighborhood, and her mother felt it was too dangerous to take her to the hospital. She died in the morning in front of the hospital entrance. Pierre couldn’t get a travel permit on time to return for her funeral.

“Sometimes, life is difficult,” he said pensively on a break from work.

The TPS, which allows him and thousands of others to remain legally in Springfield, expires on February 2026. He still hopes Trump will keep in mind the violence in Haiti and renew it.

Worry spreads over what Trump’s orders will mean for California immigrants. One in eight state residents are undocumented or live with a family member who is.

“Think about Haitians because Haiti is not a place to return to right now,” he said. “God, talk to Mr. Trump and do something for Haitians.”

The migrants’ fears were echoed by the president of Haiti’s transitional presidential council, who said the Trump administration’s decisions to freeze aid programs, deport migrants and block refugees will be “catastrophic” for Haiti.

Leslie Voltaire made the comment in an interview with the Associated Press in Rome on Saturday following a meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican.

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The pontiff and Voltaire discussed the dire situation in Haiti, where gangs have killed civilians and operate across the Caribbean nation with impunity. Half of Haiti’s 11.4 million people are already experiencing hunger, according to Voltaire, and losing humanitarian assistance will make the situation dramatically worse.

Henao and Wardarski write for the Associated Press.

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