With more than 700 Afghan refugees arriving in Minnesota, resettlement agencies are mobilizing to set up permanent housing for families — and appealing to volunteers for help.
The Minneapolis-based humanitarian organization Alight, formerly known as the American Refugee Committee, has begun furnishing and stocking housing for 250 families.
Since September, Minnesota has welcomed 721 Afghans. Evacuees who have been waiting in military bases across the country must leave by mid-February. The state aims to have resettled up to 750 people by then.
Sonia Anunciacion is the team leader for Alight's Afghan response project. She began her own advocacy work immediately after the Taliban's takeover of her home country in August. Anunciacion collected donations to deliver to Fort McCoy, a military base in Wisconsin, in September. Alight later hired her to set up housing for newly arrived Afghan families.
"With Alight, it's on a whole different level. There's a lot more people in the community joining in because I'm part of this organization," Anunciacion said.
Annie Nolte-Henning, director of the Americas at Alight, said the group has been working with longtime Afghan residents of Minnesota to learn about the needs of refugees.
"We've really been thoughtful in figuring out: What is it besides shelter that Afghan families need at this moment?" she said. "We know a house is nothing if you don't have dignity, if you don't have joy, if you don't have a sense of comfort and safety."
Here's how you can support the growing Afghan community in Minnesota.