NORTON META TAG

Showing posts with label Dedham MA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dedham MA. Show all posts

09 December 2025

UPDATE: ST.SUSANNA PARISH DEFIES ICE & Massachusetts Church Keeps Anti-ICE Nativity Scene, Defying Diocese Leaders 8&9DEZ25

 A Nativity scene with a sign that reads, “ICE Was Here.”

A Nativity scene at St. Susanna Parish in Dedham, Mass., displays a sign reading “ICE Was Here” in the spot where Jesus, Mary and Joseph would normally be. Credit...Brian Snyder/Reuters
UPDATE: authorkstarling
The Acting Director of ICE has ordered St. Susana Parish in Dedham, MA to remove this display.The church has incurred several one star reviews for their stance.Even the Archdiocese of Boston has condemned it.And yet they refuse. Well done St. Susana 👏👏👏

WELL DONE St. Susanna Parish, thank you for reminding the nation of the un-Christian attitude toward immigrants by the neo-nazi drumpf / trump-vance administration and the fascist gop / gestapo over people-republican party. This from the New York Times and Threads ( update above ).....

Massachusetts Church Keeps Anti-ICE Nativity Scene, Defying Diocese Leaders


The Christmas display, which replaces Jesus, Mary and Joseph with a sign saying “ICE Was Here,” has drawn criticism from Catholic leaders and immigration officials.


Leaders of a Catholic church near Boston kept a Nativity display with an anti-ICE message in place on Monday, defying an order from the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston to remove it.

The display, outside St. Susanna Parish in Dedham, Mass., includes the traditional shepherds, sheep and wise men gathered around a hay-filled manger. But Mary, Joseph and baby Jesus are missing, replaced by a sign reading “ICE WAS HERE” in bold blue letters.

“The Holy Family is safe in the Sanctuary of our Church,” adds a smaller note inside the Nativity scene, which is protected by a plastic shield. “If you see ICE please call LUCE.” The display includes a phone number for LUCE, an immigrant advocacy group, which tracks the activity of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Massachusetts.

ICE began a major immigration enforcement campaign in the Boston area in September, the forefront of a wave of similar efforts in other major cities.

Speaking to reporters late Monday outside the brick church, the Rev. Stephen Josoma said the intent of the display was to “evoke dialogue,” not cause a furor. He said parish leaders would confer with leaders of the archdiocese before making a final decision on its fate.

But, he added, “that some do not agree with our display does not render it sacrilegious.”

Last week, the Catholic Archdiocese of Boston told the parish to take down the signage in its Nativity display. In a statement, archdiocesan leaders said that churchgoers “have the right to expect that they will encounter genuine opportunities for prayer and Catholic worship — not divisive political messaging.”

That statement also cited church norms prohibiting “the use of sacred objects for any purpose other than the devotion of God’s people.”

Todd Lyons, the acting director of ICE, added his own criticism in recent days, telling The Boston Herald that the Nativity scene was “absolutely abhorrent” and part of “a dangerous narrative” responsible for a sharp increase in assaults on ICE officers.

Some members and supporters of the Dedham parish said they were confused by the demand from the archdiocese, which came one month after a rare and nearly unanimous statement from U.S. Catholic bishops condemning the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement campaign.

“We are saddened by the state of contemporary debate and the vilification of immigrants,” the November statement from the bishops said. “We are concerned about the conditions in detention centers and the lack of access to pastoral care. We lament that some immigrants in the United States have arbitrarily lost their legal status.”

The display at St. Susanna, on a busy street in a well-off suburb south of Boston, is the latest in a series of nontraditional Nativity scenes staged by the parish. A version in 2018 sparked similar controversy for depicting the infant Jesus in a cage, a scene church leaders said was a reflection on immigration policy at that time. A year later, the parish focused on climate change, showing some of the figures partly submerged in water.

Other politically themed Nativity scenes have popped up around the country this Christmas season, including one at a church in Evanston, Ill., that includes a baby Jesus figure with his hands bound by zip ties. In another Nativity scene near Chicago, Mary, Joseph and Jesus are missing, with a sign telling viewers that “Due to ICE activity in our community, the Holy Family is in hiding.”

Catholics in Massachusetts tend to be more liberal than church members elsewhere, and many have defended the Dedham parish. On the church’s Facebook page, reaction to the Nativity scene was split. Some commenters thanked the congregation for “speaking truth to power,” while others offered harsh judgments, including one assertion that “the devil has infiltrated the church.”

“How shameful to make a mockery of Christ’s birth,” one observer wrote.

“You are on the right side of history,” countered another.

“I wish I lived close enough to attend this church,” one woman lamented.

Elizabeth Doris-Gustin, 67, a longtime neighbor of the parish who attends an Episcopal church, said she and many of her neighbors look forward to the Christmas displays at St. Susanna every year.

“You might not agree with everything, but it makes you think,” she said. “I wish a few more churches would be this bold.”

She hopes the parish will keep this year’s display, she said. “I’m going to say a little prayer that they keep it up.”


Jenna Russell is the lead reporter covering New England for The Times. She is based near Boston.

Our Coverage of U.S. Immigration


  • Biden’s Immigration Record: The Democratic president and his top advisers rejected recommendations that could have eased the border crisis that helped return Donald Trump to the White House. Here are the takeaways from our reporting.

  • A Changed Nebraska Prison: Over two decades, a minimum-security prison aimed at helping inmates prepare to leave prison was a point of civic pride. Now, state officials have converted it to ICE detention.

  • Naturalization Ceremonies: Sweeping immigration changes by the Trump administration have resulted in the cancellation of the last step in the process of becoming a citizen.

  • Deportees at Guantánamo: A federal judge ruled that the Trump administration exceeded its authority in holding migrants designated for deportation at the U.S. Navy base in Cuba. But the judge stopped short of ordering Kristi Noem, the secretary of homeland security, to shut down the detention operation there.

  • Work Permits: The Trump administration said it would reduce how long work permits are valid for refugees and asylum seekers, intensifying a sweeping crackdown on legal immigration after an Afghan national was charged with the shooting of two National Guard members in Washington.

06 December 2025

UPDATED: ALL CHURCHES SHOULD DO THIS THIS CHRISTMAS 2025 / Woke church shocks locals with ICE-themed Nativity scene featuring baby Jesus with zip-tied hands & Boston Archdiocese says "ICE was here" sign should be removed from Dedham nativity scene 3&5DEZ25

 

GOD bless the Christians of the Lake Street Church in Evanston, IL for having the faith and moral courage to set up a Nativity scene showing what Mary, Joseph and baby Jesus would have probably experienced from ice, hsi and the cbp if Mary gave birth to our Saviour in the metro Chicago in 2025! Maybe the Boston Archdiocese needs to take a refresher class in the teachings of Jesus Christ starting with the Beatitudes instead of worrying about offending those who lack Catholic / Christian compassion. 

Woke church shocks locals with ICE-themed Nativity scene featuring baby Jesus with zip-tied hands


A Chicago-area church is turning heads with its ICE raid-inspired Nativity scene.

The Lake Street Church of Evanston set up their annual creche to include Mary wearing a respirator mask to protect herself from tear gas, and baby Jesus with his hands zip-tied as he lays under a reflective blanket used in detention centers.

Nearby, masked centurions don sunglasses and green vests reading 'ICE.'

'This installation reimagines the nativity as a scene of forced family separation, drawing direct parallels between the Holy Family's refugee experience and contemporary immigration detention practices,' the church shared on November 25 as it first showed off its nativity scene.

'This installation is not subtle because the crisis it addresses is not abstract,' the church continued in its Facebook post.

'We hope viewers will join the conversation about what sanctuary means when families fleeing violence are met with separation, detention and dehumanization. We further hope that conversation will move people to action, regardless of faith or philosophical background.'

The church then declared: 'The Holy Family were refugees. 

'This is not political interpretation, this is the reality described in the stories our tradition has told and retold for millennia.

The Lake Street Church of Evanston is turning heads for its ICE raid-inspired Nativity scene

The Lake Street Church of Evanston is turning heads for its ICE raid-inspired Nativity scene

It features baby Jesus with his hands zip-tied as he lays under a thin blanket thar resembles aluminum foil

It features baby Jesus with his hands zip-tied as he lays under a thin blanket thar resembles aluminum foil

Nearby, masked centurions don sunglasses and green vests reading 'ICE'

 Nearby, masked centurions don sunglasses and green vests reading 'ICE'

'By witnessing this familiar story through the reality faced by migrants today, we hope to restore its radical edge and to ask what it means to celebrate the birth of a refugee child while turning away those who follow in that child's footsteps,' the church concluded.

Rev. Michael Woolf, a frequent protester of ICE's operations in Chicago, also noted to NBC Chicago that 'our baby Jesus has zip ties on his hands because that was an actual incident that happened in our city.' 

The controversial display was organized by Associate Minister Jillian Westerfield, who said she was reflecting on the impact of the Trump administration's Operation Midway Blitz in Chicago, where hundreds of migrants have been detained.

'For me at least, I have experienced the face of Christ in the people who are suffering,' she told the Pioneer Press.  'We just really saw a parallel between the ICE forces and the centurions.'

'This is what the Bible says happened to Jesus and we use our contemporary imagery to illustrate that,' she continued, adding that she believes it is a 'pretty straightforward representation of what the Bible says happened to Jesus's family.'

According to the Bible, King Herod - fearing that a rival had been born to usurp his power - tried to kill baby Jesus by ordering the execution of all baby boys in Bethlehem.

Quick-thinking Joseph then took his wife, Mary, and baby Jesus and fled the city to avoid the bloodshed.

Speaking to the Pioneer Press, Westerfield said the congregation shares her sentiments about the ICE raids in the city.

Associate Minister Jillian Westerfield insisted that the congregation is on board with the display

Associate Minister Jillian Westerfield insisted that the congregation is on board with the display

Westerfield said she was reflecting on the impact of the Trump administration's Operation Midway Blitz in Chicago, where hundreds of migrants have been detained

Westerfield said she was reflecting on the impact of the Trump administration's Operation Midway Blitz in Chicago, where hundreds of migrants have been detained

'This is who we are and this is what's important to us,' she said.

'And we would be much more afraid to hold back because ultimately, we feel like we answer to God, not anyone else.'

Still, she admitted there was concern about how the broader community may react to the display - but insisted the church will not cower from expressing itself.

If someone is really upset about this year's Nativity scene, Westerfield said, 'I hope that what happens is they examine why they're really upset and maybe find within their own conscience a change of heart.'

Woolf also acknowledged that the church does not 'speak for all Christians, but we certainly speak for a certain strand of the community that's trying to take that message and say "if Jesus was born in America right now, what would this nativity look like?"'

It appears, though, that not everyone in the community was pleased with the display - which has seen Mary's gas mask removed and the zip ties cut off from baby Jesus's hands.

Woolf is now inviting members of the church and residents of the neighborhood to help restore the Nativity scene to its original state on Saturday. 

Boston Archdiocese says "ICE was here" sign should be removed from Dedham nativity scene

The Archdiocese of Boston is clashing with a church in Dedham, Massachusetts over a nativity scene with an anti-ICE message. 

It has everything you would expect in a nativity scene. There are wise men, animals, and shepherds. But there is something else in the display in front of St. Susanna's Parish in Dedham that is impossible to ignore. In the place of Jesus, Joseph and Mary, stands a sign that reads: "ICE was here." The suggestion being that they were detained by the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. A clear commentary on the current political landscape. 

Father Stephen Josoma declined an interview with WBZ-TV for this story but told us off camera that the church has long created a nativity scene that speaks to a current humanitarian issue facing the country. 

Previous nativity scene messages

This is not the first time St. Susanna's has created an unconventional nativity scene. 

In 2017, the church listed the cities of mass shootings that year next to their total fatalities. In 2018, they had a depiction of baby Jesus in a cage. It was a commentary on the first Trump administration's family separation policy at the US/Mexico border. At the time, Father Josoma told us, "We try to take a picture of the world as it is and to put it together with the Christmas message." 

This year's display was installed the Saturday after Thanksgiving and within hours it had sparked debate online. 

Dedham ICE nativity
Nativity scene at St. Susanna Parish in Dedham, Massachusetts with the message "ICE was here."CBS Boston

Michael Hersey lives just down the street from the parish and stopped by Friday night to see it for himself. "I just saw the ICE lit up as I was getting ready to turn and I was like, there is no way," Hersey said. "Personally, I just think it is not the right place. I do get it, I mean with everything going on, especially with the holidays. I know everybody has got their mixed feelings on this." 

"The display should be removed"

This year's display has made its way up the chain and ultimately led the Boston Archdiocese to issue a statement on Friday that condemned it. It read: 

"The people of God have the right to expect that, when they come to church, they will encounter genuine opportunities for prayer and Catholic worship-not divisive political messaging. The Church's norms prohibit the use of sacred objects for any purpose other than the devotion of God's people. This includes images of the Christ Child in the manger, which are to be used solely to foster faith and devotion. Regarding the recent incident, St. Susanna Parish neither requested nor received permission from the Archdiocese to depart from this canonical norm or to place a politically divisive display outside the church. The display should be removed, and the manger restored to its proper sacred purpose." 

Father Josoma told WBZ-TV that the parish has a regularly scheduled meeting this weekend and will discuss the future of the nativity scene.