SPOKANE — The congregation at Maranatha Evangelical Church in East Central was smaller than usual when the Rev. Luc Jasmin Jr. rose last Sunday to address his flock about a somber subject.
Some members of Spokane’s Haitian community had stayed home out of fear because they already knew what the pastor’s daughter, Katia Jasmin, was about to tell the 20 or so people in the pews. Three days earlier, the Trump administration had cut short a program that has allowed people from Haiti to live in the United States lawfully since 2010, when an earthquake devastated their island nation.
When the pastor’s daughter explained that Temporary Protected Status for Haitians would end on Aug. 3, the congregants began crying and murmuring in Haitian Creole, their shoulders shaking in a mix of tears and anxious, incredulous laughter.
“God is good, God has a plan for us,” Rev. Jasmin reassured his congregation. “There is no reason to cry.”