In a joint statement, Catholic bishops whose dioceses are along the
U.S.-Mexico border spoke of the “pain, the fear, and the anguish”
they’re seeing in immigrants and vowed to follow the example of the pope
in building “bridges, rather than the walls of exclusion and
exploitation.”
The Feb. 14 statement was read at the Basilica of the National Shrine
of Our Lady of San Juan del Valle in Texas after a visit by the bishops
to an immigration detention center as well as to a humanitarian respite
center at Sacred Heart Parish in McAllen, Texas, in the Brownsville
Diocese.
The statement came after two days of a gathering of bishops whose
dioceses are along the U.S.-Mexico border. The apostolic nuncio to the
United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre, also attended. The meeting
of about 20 bishops included Bishop Daniel E. Flores of Brownsville and
Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller of San Antonio.
The biannual meetings began in 1986 “to address the life and pastoral
needs of our migrant brothers and sisters,” the statement said, adding
that “in this difficult moment in our history, we hear the cry of our
migrant brothers and sisters whose voices reflect the voice of Christ
himself.”
They spoke of the plight of the Holy Family as they sought refuge and
a compassionate human response, and said they saw the same in
immigrants they met.
The suffering immigrants face is the result of “a
broken immigration system caused by political structures and economic
conditions that result in threats, deportations, impunity and extreme
violence,” they said.
Migrants are the result of these conditions and
also are victims of those who seek to extort them in their work and
under the threat of deportations that can lead to their separation from
family and friends.
“We can sense the pain of the separation of families, loss of
employment, persecutions, discrimination, racism and unnecessary
deportations that paralyze the development of persons in our societies,”
they said.
“Immigration is a global phenomenon that arises from
economic and social conditions, and the poverty and insecurity that
directly displaces entire populations, causing families to feel that
migration is the only way to survive.”
Migrants have the right to be respected “regardless of their
migration condition,” the bishops added, because every person has the
right to dignity, yet migrants are “subjected to punitive laws and often
mistreated by civil authorities both in their country of origin, the
countries through which they travel and the country of their
destination. It is essential that governments adopt policies that
respect the human rights of migrants and undocumented residents.”
In the church, they said, “there are no strangers,” and vowed to
continue to support services to migrant families “including spiritual,
legal, and material assistance.”