Both recent and long-settled immigrants faced challenges that would need material and pastoral care.

To serve both long-standing and newer immigrant parishioners, the Scalabrinians had established a community center as part of the parish. Access to the center was also opened to all Hispanic and Brazilian migrants in the area.

"The center is run by a religious sister and three or four staff," said Father Barbosa. "They have a food bank, they help people sign up for free medical care, and they help people find legal help when they need it," he added. Between 30 and 40 people would pass through the center every day.

Father Barbosa said some of more recent immigrants who came to the U.S. without legal immigration papers had paid as much as $30,000 for someone to get them into the U.S. via the Bahamas. Once in the country, they had to work three jobs to pay off that debt and could not work in their chosen profession. Others -- married in the church -- had legally divorced a spouse in Brazil in order to marry a U.S. citizen for a green card and planned to remarry their Brazilian spouse once they had a green card.

"People in that situation often come looking for the sacrament of confession, because they are carrying around guilt and they are looking for solutions. We can't burden them with more guilt," he said.

Many of the immigrants Father Barbosa worked with lived in constant fear of being discovered and deported.

"In Massachusetts, you need to have a social security number to get a driver's license, but they don't have one and need to drive to get the better jobs. So they drive without a license, and they're always afraid of being pulled over," he said.

Brazilians who had been in the United States longer face challenges connecting with their children, he said.

"Their children were born in the U.S. and feel American. The parents don't understand their kids, and the kids don't understand their parents, and they don't know how to connect," said Father Barbosa.

The cultural gap and lack of connection with their parents led to several problems for those children.

"We do a three-day weekend retreat for these young people in our parish. During the weekend, we talk about sexuality, drugs and suicide. These are 14-year-olds and they are already experiencing these three things. We try to help them feel loved by God and understand that their lives have value," said Father Barbosa.

The priest said there was also a high prevalence of alcoholism and drug abuse among immigrant men. "I'm talking about good, hard-working men. During the week they accomplish their duties and then, on the weekend, turn to alcohol and drugs. It becomes their only gratification."

Among women between the ages of 35 and 45, "we see a lot of cases of depression," Father Barbosa said. Often women carried "the weight of everything" on their shoulders as they tried to provide financially for their family and care for their children. The stress often led to the breakdown of marriages. "We see many cases where the spouses live together in the same house, but they live in separate rooms and have separate lives."

For immigrant facing those challenges, the parish and community center had become a place of refuge. Father Barbosa said people often told him "here everyone understands me."