Vatican
City, 31 May 2013
(VIS) – “Welcoming Christ in Refugees and Forcibly Displaced
Persons” is the title of the document prepared by the Pontifical
Councils for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples and
"Cor Unum", which was presented this morning at a press
conference in the Holy See Press Office. Speaking at the conference
were Cardinal Antonio Maria Veglio and Cardinal Robert Sarah,
respectively presidents of the two dicasteries. Also participating in
the presentation were: Mr. Johan Ketelers, secretary general of the
International Catholic Migration Commission (CICM) and Dr. Katrine
Camilleri, assistant director of Jesuit Refugee Service Malta and
recipient of the 2007 Nansen Refugee Award (United Nations Refugee
Award, ACNUR-UNHCR).
“Our
document,” explained Cardinal Veglio, “is a pastoral guide that
starts from a fundamental premise, ... which is that every policy,
initiative, or intervention in this area must be guided by the
principle of the centrality and dignity of every human person. …
Indeed, this is the pivot of the Church's social doctrine:
'individual human beings are the foundation, the cause and the end of
every social institution'. Refugees, asylum seekers, and the forcibly
displaced, therefore, are persons whose dignity must be protected,
indeed, it must be the absolute priority. This is why the document
recalls the rights granted to each refugee, which promote the
individuals' well-being. These are well described in the 1951 Refugee
Convention.”
“Governments
must respect these rights while further [rights to be extended] to
the people involved in forced migration must be studied. Protection
must be guaranteed to all who live under conditions of forced
migration, taking into account their specific needs, which can vary
from a residency permit for victims of human trafficking to the
possibility of being granted citizenship for those who are
stateless,” the cardinal observed. On the contrary, he noted, it is
occurring more and more frequently that refugees are subjected to
confined detention, interment in refugee camps, and having their
freedom to travel and their right to work restricted.
“It
would be very different if their recognized and declared rights were
properly respected. After all, the States have established and
ratified these convention to ensure that individuals' rights do not
remain just proclaimed ideals or commitments that are subscribed to
but not honoured. … The Church, for her part, is convinced that the
pastoral care for all persons who, in various ways, are involved in
forced migration is a collective responsibility, as well as [the
responsibility] of each individual believer. … In close connection
to moral values and the Christian vision, we mean to save human
lives, to restore dignity to persons, to offer hope, and to give
adequate social and communal responses. Letting ourselves be
challenged by the presence of refugees, asylum seekers, and other
persons who have been forcibly displace compels us to go out of our
closed world, which is familiar to us, toward the unknown, in
mission, in the courageous witness of evangelization,” the prelate
concluded.
Cardinal
Sarah then referred to the four million displaced persons within
Syria, noting the 80,000 deaths, in less than two years, that have
been “collateral effects” of the conflict. In this regard he
observed that, up until the 1950's, in war there was a proportion of
1 civilian victim to 9 military casualties while today that amount
has been inverted and dozens of thousands of people are in flight,
“in the attempt to, at least, save their lives”.
He
also referenced the population of the Sahel region of Africa,
condemned to hunger because of drought, likening the situation to
that in the American states that have recently been hit by tornadoes.
He emphasized that, “at whatever latitude, the fight against
against natural catastrophes is absolutely unequal and gives a sense
of how humanity is at the mercy of nature instead of being its
responsible custodian.” The cardinal did not overlook those who,
even in Europe, are unemployed and condemned to “a 'structural
poverty', who pay the price of political choices with their own
lives”. Many of these persons chose the path of emigration,
unleashing the “phenomenon of a flight of [intellectuals], which
further and permanently impoverishes their country of origin”.
In
this state of things “the Church intervenes in different ways
according to her ability, mainly thanks to the worthy work of her
charitable organizations and their volunteers”. But “charity,
first of all, is wed to the individual … charity isn't a window or
a register. Whoever is in need must be able to find a good Samaritan
whose heart beats with theirs because they are made alike and because
[the good Samaritan] serves Christ [in serving their neighbour in
need].” In the same way, charity “has a plural dimension: the
refugee, the impoverished, the suffering need a network of ecclesial
support that embraces and assimilates them … recognizing the
dignity of the person and making them again feel part of the human
family, respecting their identity and their faith” because “the
Christian community is called to live the ecclesial dimension of
charity”.
Good news and a critical message for all candidates in the Australian Federal Election on September 14. 14.
ReplyDeleteThere is no mention here of "excsing borders" "illegals" or "queue jumpers". This is a powerful show of compassionate support and a challenge to policies that are in breach of the United Nations Refugee Convention.