Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Why does the Syrian refugee debate ignore private charity?
Why does the Syrian refugee debate ignore private charity?
Mar 1, 2026 4:25 PM

Protesters oppose President Trump’s refugee policy outside 10 Downing Street, London. (Alisdare Hickson. CC BY-SA 2.0)

On Monday, President Trump signed a new executive order barring refugees from six majority-Muslim nations that have strong ties to terrorism. This executive order differs from the last one by removing Iraq from the banand eliminating the preferential option for the area’s persecuted Christian minority. Regardless of whether one sees this as a violation of Christian charity or a prudentially wise decision to stem potential sources of terror, one fact remains: The entire debate over Middle Eastern refugees has centered around what the government should be doing. Lost is the role of individual philanthropy, church and charitable initiatives, and ways to serve the majority of displaced persons who do not wish to leave their homes.

Fr. Peter Farrington, a Coptic priest who has a deep familiarity with the region, writes about “The missing element in the Middle Eastern refugee debate: private philanthropy” in his newest essay for Religion & Liberty Transatlantic. Fr. Farrington notes both that private charity produces better results for less money and that the U.S. dollar stretches further in the Mideast than in the West:

For any given amount of state aid – or private charity – much more could be done for many more refugees in the Middle East, than could be achieved by spending the same sums on relocating a relatively small number of migrants. A report produced by War Child, a charity that serves child refugeesin the Middle East, calculates that it costs10 times moreto support a refugee in the West than in the region (approximately $3,000 a pared to $30,000 to resettle refugees in Germany or other European nations).

Another report from November 2015 concluded that a relocated Syrian migrant requires an average funding of$64,370 for the first five yearsof relocation to the USA, while the UNHCR estimates that funding of $5,285 is required to support a refugee in the region over the same five-year period. The UNHCR is currently seeking to plug a $2.5 billion funding gap in its efforts to provide for four million Syrian refugees in the Middle East. This is what it would cost to relocate approximately 39,000 Syrians, and cover their costs in the United States. Save the Children, one of the largest charities working in the region, is able to provide a shelter kit, including tent and sleeping bags, to provide warm temporary modation for a refugee family for only $120. It is reasonable pare the e for one refugee relocated to the USA, and supported for five years, with the possibility of providing shelter for more than500 refugee families in the Middle East. (Emphasis added.)

Stephen Herreid has noted that the Catholic hierarchy in the Mideast actively opposes a policy of mass Christian emigration to the West, which they believe will leave the remaining Christian population – by definition, those with the least resources – more vulnerable to jihadist attempts at liquidation. Fr. Farrington takes up this aspect, as well:

The Melkite Catholic Archbishop of Aleppo, Jean-Clément Jeanbart,addresseda well-meaning Canadian audience, saying, “We’re not happy when we see the Canadian government moving refugees and facilitating their integration. It hurts us. A lot.” What he did request was greater levels of aid to the churches caring for the displaced in the Middle East. The Maronite Syrian bishop, Elias Sleman, considering the situation of munity,says, “We are strong in our faith, rooted in our history. We have been here for 2,000 years. We refuse to go!” He asks for Western support that would allow those who might otherwise e migrants to stay in the region and be able to support themselves. Even those who support giving Christians priority in immigration, such as Archbishop Bashar Warda of Erbil in Iraq, continue to ask for support forthe services their own munities are providing refugees, saying, “My archdiocese hosts the munity of displaced Christians in my country, and since 2014, we have received no money from the United States government and no money from the UN.”

The significant benefits that citizens of the West could render to refugees of all religious backgrounds independent of government action has not penetrated public consciousness on this issue. “Meanwhile, in the UK, levels of individual charitable giving are declining,” Fr. Farrington writes.

The reasons many in the West refer all vexing problems first to the government for resolution are many faceted. But Fr. Farrington’s conclusion dovetails with a new study released by Bowdoin psychology professor Zachary Rothschild and University of Southern Mississippi psychology professor Lucas A. Keeferexplaining that moral outrage is self-serving. Those who believe they are morally culpable for causing suffering to another person feel better if that guilt is transferred, scapegoat-like, to another person or entity. The desire to do something is as psychologically valuable as actually doing anything of use. Fr. Farrington explains how we can be found not merely hearers, but doers of the Word, in his latest essay.

You can read Fr. plete essay here.

(Photo credit:Alisdare Hickson. This photo has been cropped.CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Australian PM Tony Abbott: Private Virtue vs. Public Duty
On Saturday, Tony Abbott, a member of the Liberal-National Coalition, was elected prime minister of Australia despite being considered “too religious, too conservative and too blunt” to win a national election. Turns out, he’s an admirer of the work of Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg (Australian born). In 2001, Abbott addressed the role of government in alleviating poverty and reducing unemployment in an issue of Policy Magazine, in a special feature titled, “Against the Prodigal State.” He begins: The story...
The End of Anthony Weiner’s Sad and Pathetic Lust for Political Power?
Anthony Weiner did not win the Democratic Party primary for New York City last night. Leading in the polls at one time, he ended up with 5 percent of the vote. His defiant and circus like campaign appropriately ended with more bizarre theatrics. In a scolding interview, Weiner was called out for his political power addiction recently by Lawrence O’Donnell of MSNBC. Though O’Donnell sees no need to call him out for his moral behavior and personally he doesn’t feel...
Religious Shareholder Activists: Soros Gets a Free Pass
Reading the 2013 results of proxy shareholder resolutions orchestrated by various leftist organizations affiliated with “religiously” oriented investment groups, a colorfully descriptive phrase came to mind to describe both: Whatever its derivation, useful idiots is employed as “a pejorative term for people perceived as propagandists for a cause whose goals they are not fully aware of, and who are used cynically by the leaders of the cause.” For the purposes of this post, we’ll grant groups with purported religious and...
Peter Greer on the ‘Spiritual Danger’ of Service and Charity
Peter Greer has spent his life doing good, from serving refugees in the Congo to leading HOPE International, a Christian-based network of microfinance institutions operating in 16 countries around the world. Yet as Greer argues in his latest book, The Spiritual Danger of Doing Good, “service and charity have a dark side.” Pointing to a study by Fuller Seminary’s Dr. J. Robert Clinton, Greer notes that “only one out of three biblical leaders maintained a dynamic faith that enabled them...
Callings and the childfree life
I share Fr. Robert Barron’s concern about many of the attitudes on display in this Time magazine cover story on “the childfree life.” As Barron writes, much of the problem stems from the basic American attitude toward a life of “having it all.” Thus, Barron observes, “Whereas in one phase of the feminist movement, ‘having it all’ meant that a woman should be able to both pursue a career and raise a family, now it apparently means a relationship and...
Can For-Profit Corporations Have Religious Purposes?
Since they can have religious purposes, churches, charities, and parochial school all have legitimate — and legally recognized — claims to religious liberty. Why then, asks legal scholar Jonathan H. Adler, could for-profit corporations not also have religious purposes? An individual sole proprietor — of, say, a kosher deli, to use Will’s example — would clearly be able to press a religious liberty claim, whether or not she hopes the deli will make her rich (and whether or not mits...
Is Pope Francis Welcoming Liberation Theology Into The Vatican?
With a bit of breathless excitement (“a progressive theological current“), there is news in Rome that Pope Francis is ing liberation theology back into the Vatican. On Sunday, Sept. 8, the Vatican announced a meeting between the pope and Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Mueller has co-authored a book with Gustavo Gutierrez, a Peruvian who is considered the founder of liberation theology, and the two will present the book to Pope...
The Federal Government Attacks Louisiana School Choice
Last week, as the country was remember MLK’s dream of children being judged on the content of their character rather than the color of their skin, Attorney General Eric Holder was suing the state of Louisiana because he’s more worried, as the Wall Street Journal says, about plexion of the schools’ student body than their manifest failure to educate. Late last week, Justice asked a federal court to stop 34 school districts in the Pelican State from handing out private-school...
The Camel’s Hump: Rudyard Kipling on Idleness and Hard Work
The other night, I sat down with my kids to read one of my favorite Rudyard Kipling poems, “The Camel’s Hump,”a remarkable 19th-century takedown of 21st-century couch-potato culture. With typical color and wit, Kipling takes aim at idleness, decrying “the hump we get from having too little to do” — “the hump that is black and blue.”Kipling proceeds to elevate labor, noting that hard work refreshes the soul and reinvigorates the spirit: “The cure for this ill is not to...
Quebec Ponders Banning Public Employees From Wearing Overt Religious Symbols
Parti Québécois and Bernard Drainville, minister of the newly proposed charter, announced yesterday that a new plan would ban overt religious symbols to be worn by “judges, police, prosecutors, public daycare workers, teachers, school employees, hospital workers and municipal personnel.” These symbols would include large crosses or crucifixes, turbans, hijab, and kippas. Smaller jewelry (such as Star of David earrings) would be allowed. This proposal has caused uproar, both in the Quebec government and in the public. Here are a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved