Religious Workers Visa (R-1, R-2)
Religious workers include ministers of religion
who are authorized by a recognized denomination to conduct religious worship and perform
other duties usually performed by members of the clergy such as administering the sacraments,
or their equivalent. The term does not apply to lay preachers. Religious vocation means
a calling to religious life, evidenced by the demonstration of a lifelong commitment,
such as taking of vows. Examples include nuns, monks, and religious brothers and sisters.
Religious occupation means a habitual engagement in an activity which relates to
a traditional religious function. Examples include liturgical workers, religious instructors or
cantors, catechists, workers in religious hospitals, missionaries, religious translators, or
religious broadcasters. It does not include janitors, maintenance workers, clerks, fund raisers,
solicitors of donations, or similar occupations. The activity of a lay-person who will be
engaged in a religious occupation must relate to a traditional religious function. The
activity must embody the tenets of the religion and have religious significance, relating
primarily, if not exclusively, to matters of the spirit as they apply to the religion.
Requirements:
A religious worker is a person who for
the past two years has been a member of a religious denomination which has a bona
fide nonprofit, religious organization in the United States; and who has been
carrying on the vocation, professional work, or other work described below, continuously
for the past two years; and seeks to enter the U.S. to work solely:
- As
a minister of that denomination; or
- In a professional capacity in a religious vocation or occupation for that organization;
or
- In a religious vocation or occupation for the organization or its nonprofit
affiliate