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Asylum seekers follow Canadian path once used by Underground Railroad

Angelica A. Morrison
Bridge crossing in Niagara Falls NY location where Harriet Tubman helped runaway slaves escape to Canada.

More than 150 years ago, the Great Lakes region played a key role in the Underground Railroad. Runaway slaves made their way to cities along the lakes and crossed the border to freedom in Canada. Fast forward to today, when thousands of asylum seekers are passing up a chance to live in the U.-S. – and are heading north too.

 
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An Amtrak train pulls into the Niagara Falls Station. It’s just a few miles away from the famous waterfalls. It’s also near the spot where abolitionist Harriet Tubman helped runaway slaves cross a bridge to Canada.

“The U.S. and Canadian border was the difference between oppression and freedom," says Sara Capen , the executive director for the Niagara Falls National Heritage Area.

Inside the station Capen points to a map of the region and then her finger lands on the Niagara River, which runs from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario.

“If you were journeying, and you looked at the geography alone, you weren’t likely to cross Lake Ontario perhaps Lake Erie in spots, certainly Buffalo area. But, the Niagara River was narrow it was the most easy and accessible way to get to Canada," she says.

Today, thousands of people are using similar routes to cross the border. Many are asylum seekers. They’re people who cannot go back to their home country, for various reasons like religious or political persecution. So they ask for protection in another country.

Anna Ireland Mongo is the chief program officer for the Jericho Road Community Center in Buffalo. The center operates a shelter for asylum seekers called Vive. Last year, Vive helped about 15,000 people claim asylum in Canada. The pace has quickened this year -- they’re up to about 13,000 so far.

She says many people are making the choice to claim asylum in Canada as opposed to the U.S. for two reasons:  the hostile political climate towards immigrants and President Donald Trump’s travel ban.

“There’s a certain amount of fear attached to the journey anyway. But, I think at that particular point in time people did not feel safe in the U.S.,” she says. "And nobody knew what was going to happen, but it felt scarier than it normally does."

People who cross into Canada from the Great Lakes region enter the province of Ontario.

Last year, the Canadian Border Services Agency counted about 4,000 asylum seekers who entered Ontario through land crossings. So far this year they’ve counted close to 3,000.

The trend is the same in the Quebec area. In fact, the crowds are so big that officials have used parts of Olympic Stadium in Montreal as a temporary shelter.

Further west is Detroit, where T.J. Rogers is the program manager for the Freedom House. It’s another shelter that helps people claiming asylum. He sees the similarities between the Underground Railroad and today’s rush of asylum seekers.

“I think absolutely, in the general sense, of what the underground railroad represented and the idea of moving north and how it represented freedom,” he says. “I think that’s absolutely the case.”

Rogers says the Freedom House also is seeing more and more people expressing interest in going to Canada.

And here, like Niagara Falls and Buffalo, it’s just a short trip across a river.