Group of people assembling a house frame

Self Help Housing Program in California's Central Valley. Terry Foss / AFSC

From our origins during World War I, AFSC has been committed to opening hearts and communities to immigrants and refugees. Our work is grounded in our Quaker belief in the inherent worth and dignity of all people. 

Our decades of work in regions plagued by war, drought, famine, and economic oppression have given us an up-close view of the root causes of migration. These ideas shape AFSC's work today. 

We support migrants on their journeys, provide immigrants with free legal services, document abuses, and accompany migrant and immigrant movements. Together, we are working for a world where migration is a choice, not a necessity, because everyone has what they need to thrive. Learn more about ongoing work. 

1920s

Speaking out against xenophobia

Cover of a pamphlet published by AFSC

Cover of the 1925 brochure, published by AFSC.

Cover of a brochure produced in 1925

"Message to the American People on Japan," published and distributed by AFSC in 1925.

AFSC spoke out against the racist U.S. Immigration Act of 1924, which barred immigration from Asia. Our publication “Exclusion: Its Cause and Cure” outlined the roots of racism and noted the contributions that Japanese Americans had made to the U.S. economy.

1930s

Assisting refugees

Black and white photograph of a warehouse full of boxes

The store-room in the Friends Meeting House at 15th and Cherry Street, Philadelphia.

Black and white photo of children sitting on a step

Spanish refugee children being fed during the Spanish Civil War.

Black and white photo of children lining up to receive food

Child feeding program during the Spanish Civil War.

Black and white photo of children drinking from metal tins

Child feeding program during the Spanish Civil War.

AFSC officially began the Refugee Services division. We were the first U.S. organization to provide relief to refugees on both sides of the conflict during the Spanish Civil War. Later, we helped thousands of children and families escape Nazi persecution during World War II.

1940s

Opposing Japanese internment

Woman and two children looking out from a train window

Relocation of Japanese Americans during World War II.

Woman sitting outside on a suitcase
Black and white photo of a street with dwellings on either side

Farm Security Administration migrant labor camp at Twin Falls, Idaho, a resettlement location for Japanese Americans.

AFSC was one of the few U.S. organizations to oppose the internment of Japanese Americans. We also visited and provided aid to people interned. We established two programs to get people out of camps, eventually securing the release of more than 4,000 individuals.

1950s

Organizing with farmworkers

Organizing with farmworkers

1965 AFSC film that chronicles an AFSC housing project led by farm workers in the San Joaquin Valley.

Group of people assembling a house frame

Self Help Housing in California's Central Valley. Terry Foss / AFSC

Group of people assembling a house frame

Self Help Housing in California's Central Valley. Terry Foss / AFSC

Man speaking in front of a microphone

Pablo Espinoza of Proyecto Campesino, Central Valley, California. Terry Foss / AFSC

People working on a farm

Terry Foss / AFSC

AFSC’s partnership with migrant farmworkers began with the demand to eliminate tinshack housing and improve basic services. Later, AFSC helped create the United Farm Workers, providing meeting places, collecting funds for strikers, and paying the chief union negotiator’s salary.

1970s - 1980s

Solidarity with Latin America

Several women standing outside a building

AFSC staff member Angie Berryman. Photo: Eva Gold

Cover of a report produced by AFSC

Central American Refugee report, 1983, authored by Angie Berryman.

Cover of a newspaper featuring an article on AFSC work

When popular movements rose up in Central America in the 1970s and ‘80s, governments responded with brutality. AFSC’s staff on the ground helped expose this brutality and how the U.S. was fueling state violence. In the U.S., we coordinated with faith communities to offer sanctuary to refugees.

1990s - 2000s

Supporting community-led organizing

Man speaking at a podium in front of a crowd

Arturo leaves sanctuary in 2015 after nine months, accompanied by the Metro Denver Sanctuary Coalition, coordinated by AFSC. Joe Deras

Group of people holding signs at a vigil

Family and friends of Anastasio Hernández lead a protest and vigil at the San Ysidro port of entry on the third anniversary of his death at the hands of CBP/Border Patrol. Slobodan Dimitrov

We strengthened and connected immigrant-led organizing through leadership training and community initiatives. We united this work through a strategy which laid out principles for achieving comprehensive immigration reform.

2010s

Aiding migrants on the move

People march down a dirt road holding two large banners

The Love Knows No Borders week of action started with a massive event at the San Diego Border Field State Park. Pedro Rios / AFSC

Activists kneel in front of armed border patrol agents

Interfaith activists walked from the parking lot down the mile and a half trail to the border wall. Vanessa Cecena / AFSC

Man being arrested by border patrol agents

Many risked arrest and were arrested in protest of the border and treatment of migrants. Wambui Gichobi / Survival Media Agency

As large groups of migrants traveled north from Central America, AFSC provided them with humanitarian support and human rights monitoring. We rallied 400 people to the U.S.-Mexico border for our “Love Knows No Borders” action, which was named “the most valuable protest of the year” by The Nation.