Drawing on our Jewish values and history, HIAS stands for a world in which refugees find welcome, safety, and opportunity.
Originally founded to assist Jews fleeing pogroms in Eastern Europe, today HIAS works around the world to assist displaced people of all backgrounds.
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HIAS is working to ensure support following the mass terrorist violence in Israel on October 7, 2023.Learn More
Since April 2023, more than 400,000 refugees have crossed the border into Chad. Learn about HIAS’ response.Learn More
The center is dedicated to generating new ideas to inform and educate policymakers on issues related to advancing refugee rights across the globe.
Help integrate refugees into communities across the U.S. through HIAS-led private sponsorship groups.
HIAS provides vital services to displaced people and communities impacted by displacement in more than 20 countries around the world.
HIAS is currently responding to the humanitarian emergency across the country as a result of recent violent attacks against the civilian population.
HIAS is working across the Darién Gap to provide refugees and asylum seekers with gender-based violence prevention and response, legal support, and mental health services.
HIAS South Africa’s first director Alana Pugh-Jones Baranov discusses her plan to work alongside the country’s Jewish community.
One year after the crisis in Sudan began, a letter from the HIAS Clergy Council calls for the global community to protect Sudanese civilians.
The Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC) and HIAS work with survivors of GBV in Colombia, Ecuador and Peru to provide emergency care and long-term supo…
Together, we can help create a world in which refugees find welcome, safety, and opportunity. Join us.
Explore ways that you can help refugees, asylum seekers, and other displaced people find welcome in your community, the U.S., and around the world.
Incorporate stories and insights from refugees into your Passover Seder using the HIAS Haggadah and a new supplemental reading for Passover 2024.
By HIAS.org
Apr 24, 2024
Asylum seekers carry their belongings outside makeshift tents built in front of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) offices in Pretoria, South Africa on April 21, 2023. (Stringer/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
In April 2024, HIAS officially opens an office in South Africa. HIAS is now established in three countries in Africa: Chad, Kenya, and South Africa. In a recent conversation, HIAS South Africa’s first director Alana Pugh-Jones Baranov discussed her plan to work alongside the country’s Jewish community in social action and social justice, as well as other initiatives in the years to come. Focusing on legal protection and advocacy at first, HIAS South Africa will eventually provide mental health support and gender-based violence prevention as well as support for women and children and the LGBTQ+ refugee community.
Q: What do you hope to accomplish in this first year? What do you want to focus on in the next year?
HIAS South Africa hopes to contribute meaningfully and sustainably to the refugee sector and broader civil society in South Africa. We want to make a positive impact on the lives of refugees, asylum seekers, and migrants, ease the challenges they face in the country, and ensure they have access to the rights enshrined in South Africa’s Constitution and Bill of Rights.
We have started off small, basing ourselves in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal; and hope to grow slowly and sustainably in other geographic regions in the country and to expand our work and services into other sectors.
Initially, our work will focus on legal protection and advocacy, specifically around refugee rights and documentation as well as combating and preventing Afrophobia and xenophobia in South Africa. Our initiatives will also address mental health and psychosocial support as well as assistance for women and children and the LGBTQ+ refugee community who are at risk of gender-based violence.
Alana Pugh-Jones Baranov
HIAS South Africa will support long-standing refugee non-governmental organizations and networks which have been making inspiring strides in refugee rights and assistance in the country for decades. In addition, we hope to capacitate, resource, and empower grassroots and refugee-led organizations and networks to expand their work both in Durban and across South Africa.
HIAS South Africa will find existing gaps in the refugee sector and see where we can share our global expertise and best practices to bring together the various networks and initiatives that may be currently working in silos.
HIAS South Africa will be holding various activities and actions in the fields of legal protection and advocacy in the coming year. Some of our projects include free legal help desks for the refugee community; print, broadcast, and social media campaigns against xenophobia; and engaging with government and civil society on refugee laws and policies.
Partnerships and localization play a fundamental role in our work. HIAS South Africa is specifically taking a localization approach, with indirect implementation through well-respected and trusted partners. As a new organization in the country, we felt that it was crucial to be guided in partnership with other NGOs and refugee-led groups who have the expertise, experience, and on-the-ground knowledge.
1. We believe that refugee rights are human rights.
2. We are putting ancient Jewish values and principles from our religious and historical traditions, including tzedek (justice) and tikkun olam (repairing the world), into action.
3. We are ensuring that refugees, migrants, and asylum seekers have all the rights they deserve as enshrined in our democracy and South Africa’s progressive and ground-breaking constitution.
The South African Jewish community, with its own history of facing discrimination and fleeing persecution, has always felt a unique connection to the refugee community in the country and, particularly since the xenophobic riots of 2008, has been involved in advocating for and supporting refugee, asylum seekers, and migrants in many ways. HIAS has had a long relationship with the Jewish community in South Africa, and HIAS South Africa hopes to work alongside the Jewish community in South Africa to further assist refugees and combat xenophobia and all forms of discrimination and hate in the country.
Apr 5, 2024
Feb 13, 2024
Feb 5, 2024
Feb 5, 2024
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