An Arizona church known for feeding migrants now says the city is blocking its work

Jose Manuel Castro

In a recent lawsuit, Jose Manuel Castro, pastor of the Gethsemani Baptist Church, says friction with the city of San Luis has forced the church to cancel multiple events, including its annual Thanksgiving turkey drive thru.

By Juliana Kim, NPR

For the past 23 years, Gethsemani Baptist Church in San Luis, Arizonia, made it its mission to offer food to anyone who wanted it.

Through free meals and food drives, the church fed its local community, as well as hungry families in the greater region, like California and Mexico.

The church, which is about a 5-minute drive from the Mexican border, also served as a crucial support system for people who crossed into the United States, often fatigued, overwhelmed and with little to no belongings.

A family of five who said they were from Guatemala and a man in a pink shirt from Peru walk through the desert after crossing in the Tucson Sector of the U.S.-Mexico border last month. Despite efforts of three U.S. administrations, migrant families keep crossing the border. Matt York/AP

But that all came to a halt in March, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court by the church earlier this month.

The suit alleges that starting in 2022, the city of San Luis grew hostile over the church’s food ministry, accusing the church of violating zoning laws by its use of a semi-truck to load and unload donations. The suit also alleges that the city incorrectly interpreted the food distribution work as commercial activity in a non-commercial zone.

‘We are the first person to give the first meal, the first bottle of water.’

The food ministry started in 1999 after a woman appeared in front of the church’s door with 500 pounds of food and no one to give it to, according to Castro.

The woman had planned to take the boxes of food, which included rice, beans, and flour, to Mexico but was denied entry by Mexican customs agents, he said. So, the next day, Castro and his church organized a food bank. By evening, all the food was dispersed.

Over the next two decades, Castro drove across the state on a weekly basis and sometimes, even to California and Nevada, to collect free food. As donations grew, so did the need — especially when it came to supporting people arriving from the Mexican border, he said.

Castro, who is originally from Mexico and moved to San Luis to start a Spanish-speaking church, said he and his staff not only provided food and blankets to migrants, but often also answered questions from newly arrived migrants like, what state they were in, when would they be able to contact their families, and about the immigration process.

Migrants walk towards a Border Patrol agent in the town of Jacumba. Those crossing the border are often being instructed by cartels to turn themselves over to agents, to receive asylum. Ash Ponders for NPR

“We are the first person to give the first meal, the first bottle of water,” he said.

The number of people crossing the Mexican border into Yuma County has fluctuated over the years. According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Yuma sector encountered migrants over 174,000 times in fiscal year 2023. The year before, the number of encounters was over 310,000. This year, there have been 27,000 encounters so far, according to CBP data.

Mayor Riedel, a Democrat who also immigrated to the U.S. from Mexico, told KAWC in December 2022 that the flow of migrants coming through San Luis had put a strain on the city’s emergency services, like ambulances.

Police and a city enforcer showed up at the church to fine the pastor, suit says

The city of San Luis had long supported the church’s food ministry, but that all changed in 2022 with the election of Riedel as mayor, according to the lawsuit.

In 2023, the city warned the pastor that semi-trucks were not allowed to be parked in the area where the church is located, per the San Luis zoning code, the suit said. For years, the church had relied on two semi-trucks to transport food and other donations from a warehouse to the church.

The city also told the church that its food distribution was a commercial operation and therefore only allowed in a commercial or industrial zoning district, the suit added.

Gethsemani Baptist Church collects food from multiple states to support the local community, as well as churches and families in Mexico and California

The church tried its best to comply by unloading its semi-truck about a mile away from the church, but there was still pushback, church leaders said. In one incident this February, a semi-truck carrying a large donation of supplies mistakenly arrived at the church. According to the suit, the pastor directed the driver to the correct drop-off site. Yet, the next day, a city code enforcer and two police officers came to the church to hand code violations to Castro.

The encounter rattled Castro. He said when he now sees police near his church, he feels uneasy.

“I’m thinking right away, ‘What happened now? What did I do?'” Castro said.

Starting in March, the church paused its food ministry completely and refused donations out of fear of getting in more trouble with the city. Nearly every day, Castro gets asked when the food ministry will reopen.

“I just hope, and I pray, and I wait for the city of San Luis to change their mind,” he said.

First published March 24, 2024

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