Brian R Corbin's Reflections on Religion and Life

Living Your Faith as Citizens and Leaders in Politics, Culture, Society and Business

Caritas Group Decries European Immigration Rule

Recalls Opposite Situation in Colonial Times

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica, JULY 23, 2008 ( Zenit.org ).- The Caritas network of Latin America and the Caribbean is reminding Europe that immigrants are not delinquents.

A joint statement from representatives of the network responded to the “Return Directive,” approved by the European Union last month. The measure, which could go into effect in 2010, has been criticized by human rights groups and Latin American government officials as overly harsh. It allows for up to 18 months’ detention prior to deportation and banishment from the E.U. for several years.

The Caritas statement appeals to the European Parliament and its representatives in European Union governments, to “desist from the tendency to criminalize migrations and the expulsion of people in irregular situations.”

The statement is signed by Bishop Fernando Bargalló, president of the Latin American and Caribbean Caritas, and by José Antonio Sandoval, executive secretary of the secretariat.

The E.U. directive, the statement adds, “is contrary to a global, safe, humane migratory system consistent with the fundamental rights of the human person.”

The communiqué’s signatories reject “categorically that migrants, being in an irregular situation, should be regarded as criminals, promoting their expulsion, measures that deprive them of liberty and ban them from entry.”

The signatories expressed their special opposition to the “application of these measures to minors, as we believe this violates their fundamental rights.”

They expressed their disagreement “with the shielding of economies and systems of social protection that for years have benefited from the effort of a working population seeking to improve the living conditions of their families.”

Brothers and sisters

The Caritas statement recalled that religious traditions teach the faithful to welcome one another with love.

“Every day we witness the suffering of immigrant families who have lost loved ones, who died at sea, or of immigrants themselves who have experienced exploitation in their work or abuse at the hands of human traffickers and other unscrupulous individuals,” it continued. “We also witness the pain of those who remain; we see children and elderly people taking on responsibilities that do not correspond to them to take care of homes, and we also see the daily sacrifice, full of love and tenderness, to take care of families from a distance.”

It is alarming, say the signatories, that educated Europe, a traditional land of asylum and a rich land, has approved this directive to expel immigrants in irregular situations.

It is painful “to witness that representatives of countries such as France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Holland, England, etc., whose migrations in colonial times to America, Asia and Africa, represented for them not only an immense opening of horizons but also the concrete possibility of economic growth, have forgotten that recent history and now vote and approve, in an ill-timed manner, this inhuman directive,” they added.

The Caritas statement appeals instead for measures from Europe to help fledgling economies in Latin America.

“As organizations and networks of a religious nature, of solidarity and charity, we call attention to the ethical dimension of the European Directive,” the statement concluded, “and to the need to put into practice policies that safeguard the human dignity of all people.”

Filed under: Caritas, Migration, Social Justice

Caritas Laments G-8’s Lack of Fresh Leadership

Says Failure to Meet Millennium Goals a Scandal

ROME, JULY 9, 2008 ( Zenit.org ).- The Caritas representative at the Group of Eight meeting in Japan lamented that the results of the summit were a stalemate and a repetition of the same failing promises.

Joseph Donnelly, who is the head of the Caritas delegation at the United Nations in New York, gave a bleak evaluation of the G-8 meeting that ended today.

“The outcomes of the 2008 G-8 are stalemate on climate change and a broken record on aid for Africa,” he said. “The world was looking for fresh leadership, but instead got Groundhog Day.”

The leaders promised to uphold previous pledges made at the 2005 G-8 summit on increased levels of aid, but did not define the concrete steps to fulfill the promises, Caritas reported. Three years into the G-8’s five-year plan on increasing overseas aid to $50 billion a year, only a fifth of the money has been delivered.

“Reheated commitments on aid that we’re still waiting to see fulfilled three years later will not deliver food, education, clean water, and health to the poorest people,” Donnelly said. “The tragedy is that we can show the massive improvements that have been made in developing countries with the little amounts of aid that have been delivered. The G-8 countries can afford to deliver on their aid pledges so it will be a scandal if the Millennium Development Goals fail to be reached because of lack of financing.”

Climate change

Caritas also lamented the results of the summit discussion on climate change.

“G-8 leaders needed to end the inertia on carbon emissions, instead they repeated in 2008 what was said 16 years ago at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio,” Donnelly said. “It’s a plan for inertia in which the poor are paying the cost now on behalf of the rich countries who are responsible, but in which the whole world will eventually foot the bill of an increasingly hostile climate.”

The G-8 includes Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.

Filed under: Caritas, Social Doctrine, Social Justice

Reflections on my trip to Guadalajara Mexico for Cor Unum

See my reflections on my trip to Mexico for Cor Unum meeting of Caritas agency leaders in the Americas

 

From the Roundtable of Social Action Directors, National Pastoral Life Center

http://www.nplc.org/roundtable/0807/guadalajara.php

Filed under: Caritas, Cor Unum, Personal Reflections, ,

Pontiff: Church’s Charity Shows Face of God

Shares Honduran Bishops’ Concern Over Poverty

VATICAN CITY, JUNE 26, 2008 (Zenit.org).- With its commitment to combat poverty and violence, and with its work in education, the Church shows the merciful face of God, Benedict XVI says.

The Pope affirmed this today when he received in audience the Honduran bishops, in Rome for their five-yearly visit. He reminded them that “like the proclamation of the word and the celebration of the sacraments, the service of charity is an essential part of the mission of the Church.”

The Holy Father highlighted the bishops’ role in this service of charity, though he added: “I know well how the poverty, which affects so many of your fellow-countrymen, afflicts you.”

Some 70% of Honduras’ 7 million inhabitants are below the poverty line.

The Pontiff assured the bishops that he shares their concern at the “increase in violence, emigration, destruction of the environment, corruption, and lack of education, among other grave problems.”

“As ministers of the Good Shepherd, you have displayed, in word and deed, an intense endeavor to assist the needy,” the Pope affirmed. He encouraged them “to continue to show in your ministry the merciful face of God, fostering in all your diocesan communities and parishes an extensive and detailed service of charity, which will reach in a special way the sick, the elderly and the imprisoned.”

In his greeting to the Pope, Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez Maradiaga, archbishop of Tegucigalpa and president of the Honduras episcopal conference, expressed his concern over the “inhuman poverty” in his country, now aggravated by the rise in the cost of petrol and food.

This situation leads to the exodus of thousands of citizens — seeking better opportunities — which contributes to the break-up of families, he lamented.

At the same time, the country is suffering from violence and crime, though the Church has launched a nationwide campaign in favor of life.

Filed under: Caritas, Migration, Papal Teachings, Social Doctrine, Social Justice

Cor Unum Gathering in the Americas for Caritas

SPIRITUAL EXERCISES FOR LEADERS OF CHARITY IN AMERICAS

VATICAN CITY, 30 MAY 2008 (VIS) – The Pontifical Council “Cor Unum” today announced that from 2 to 6 June a series of spiritual exercises will be held in Guadalajara, Mexico, under the direction of Fr. Raniero Cantalamessa O.F.M. Cap., preacher of the Pontifical Household.
Some 500 men and women from North America, Latin America and the Caribbean, leaders of the Catholic Church’s mission of charity, will participate in the initiative. The Holy Father has sent them a Message in which he “invites all to intensify their friendship with the Lord Jesus. This divine dimension of love characterises the Church’s charitable organisations and makes their activity irreplaceable”.

The “Cor Unum” English-language communique continues: “The generosity of people today and their willingness to help whenever catastrophe strikes, such as the tsunami or the cyclone in Myanmar, is truly impressive. At the same time, Christians are convinced that, beside material assistance, human affliction needs a message of hope that only Christ can give though faith-filled witness. The Pontifical Council ‘Cor Unum’, the dicastery of the Holy See charged with orienting and co-ordinating the Church’s charitable activities, has proposed this gathering as a school for deepening faith”.
CON-CU/SPIRITUAL EXERCISES/GUADALAJARA VIS 080530 (210)

Filed under: Caritas, Cor Unum, Social Doctrine