Our Story

Casa Alterna Timeline

  • 2000

    A Family Is Created

    Anton and Charlotte adopt Jairo, a two-year-old from Guatemala. They commit to raising him in a multicultural family with ties to Guatemala and Guatemalan immigrants.
  • 2001

    A Friendship Is Formed

    Anton and Charlotte Flores and Arturo and Norma Martinez befriend one another while worshiping in a Spanish-language church.
  • 2002

    Neighbors Become Family

    Norma develops end-stage renal disease and requires stable, hygienic housing. Anton and Charlotte purchase a second home where Arturo and Norma reside at below-market cost and with an extra incentive of equity sharing after living in the house for three years.
  • 2006

    A Leap of Faith

    Anton resigns from a tenure-track college faculty position to devote his vocational energies to launching a ministry rooted in a community called Alterna.
  • 2007

    Let My People Go!

    Following a hunger strike in a recently opened immigration detention center, Alterna partners with Koinonia Farm and School for Conversion to hold the first vigil outside Stewart Detention Center. Alterna would also become a charter member of Georgia Detention Watch, with Anton serving on the charter steering committee.
  • 2008

    And You Visited Me…

    In conjunction with Georgia Detention Watch, Alterna organizes humanitarian and solidarity visitations at Stewart Detention Center.
  • 2009

    #ShutDownStewart

    The annual #ShutDownStewart vigil aligns with the yearly gathering of thousands demanding the closure of the School of the Americas (WHINSEC) at Fort Benning. By 2015, 1400 protestors marched to the facility's gates, demanding its closure.
  • 2010

    A House of Refuge

    Alterna births El Refugio, a hospitality house and visitation ministry serving immigrants at Stewart Detention Center and their loved ones.
  • 2012

    Inspiring Others

    After an exploratory visit by Sarah Jackson of Colorado, she returns home and forms Casa de Paz outside the Aurora Processing Center, another immigration detention facility.
  • 2015

    Community at the Center of Our Life

    The Alterna community reaches a peak number of residential members, with nine households residing in the same neighborhood as either member of our cooperative housing, faith fellowship, and/or intentional community.
  • 2016

    Tragedy Strikes

    Two back-to-back deaths send the entire community into a life-altering experience of deep, collective grief in need of grace.
  • 2017

    Rising from the Ashes

    With deaths and relocation, the Alterna Community disbands. In its place, Anton and Charlotte establish Casa Alterna, a hospitality house in a Latinx immigrant neighborhood. Healing happens, and the love of neighbor is expressed via community organizing, after-school tutoring, and a food cooperative.
  • 2019

    Casa Alterna Decatur

    With Jairo living in Atlanta and Arturo happily remarried, Anton & Charlotte return to Atlanta, where they first met and fell in love. Anton accepts a residency with the Atlanta Friends Meeting (Quakers).
  • 2020

    A New Virus, A New Ministry

    During the COVID-19 pandemic, a new expression of hospitality, mercy, and justice emerged. The meetinghouse transforms into a space where lodging, accompaniment, and assistance are offered at no cost to individuals and families fighting for asylum and against deportation.
  • 2022

    Casa Alterna's Transitional House

    In the summer of 2022, many Venezuelan asylum seekers began seeking refuge in the United States. Casa Alterna hurriedly rents a house owned by Atlanta Mennonite Church, a second location of radical hospitality. Before the lease is even signed and improvements are made, two Venezuelan brothers move in. In the final quarter of 2022, eight asylum seekers will call this place home for what will be a transitional period of up to six months.
  • 2025

    Compañeros at the Gates of ICE

    Casa Alterna begins a ministry outside Atlanta's ICE field office, accompanying asylum seekers with know-your-rights information, legal referrals, and compassionate presence. In solidarity with those facing detention, we embody a humane alternative—rooted in peace, dignity, and love that crosses borders.