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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

Post by Wosbald »

+JMJ+

Source: America
Link: americamagazine DOT org/politics-society/2024/03/22/catholic-charities-anti-migrant-harrassment-247571
Threats to Catholic Charities staffers increase amid anti-migrant campaign

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(RNS) — The man who left a recording on Appaswamy “Vino” Pajanor’s voicemail earlier this month spoke with an even keel, but his message was anything but calm. Over the course of roughly 40 seconds, the caller accused Pajanor, the head of Catholic Charities San Diego, of “facilitating illegal immigration,” “breaking the law” and being “not really Christian.”

The man saved his most volatile remarks for last, calling Pajanor, an immigrant and U.S. citizen, “scum” and much worse before ending with “Go back to India, you piece of garbage,” according to a recording provided to Religion News Service.

Over the past few months, Pajanor and staffers at Catholic Charities across the country, a decentralized, 113-year-old faith-based non-profit, have become the targets of right-leaning media personalities, conspiracy theorists and even members of Congress. The smear campaign is rooted in opposition to offering aid to immigrants, which critics frame as incentivizing illegal immigration, while sometimes accusing faith groups of breaking the law or working with drug cartels.

The result has been a series of unsettling incidents that have transpired near or even inside Catholic Charities facilities in what officials say is a rapidly growing threat to their safety.

“We have never seen this level,” Pajanor said, referring to the avalanche of vitriol he and his staff have received. “Some of our team members have been here for 20, 30 years, and they have said they have never seen such a thing happen.”

[…]

For Pajanor, whose group operates homeless shelters and 14 food pantries in the city, the recent avalanche of hate followed a visit by James O’Keefe, a far-right provocateur who was recently forced out of Project Veritas, the activist organization he founded, following complaints regarding his treatment of staff. O’Keefe appeared earlier this month with a film crew outside a hotel that was being used by Catholic Charities San Diego to house migrants who had been processed by CBP.

In videos posted to social media, O’Keefe and his team can be seen questioning security guards outside the hotel. O’Keefe even posed as an exterminator to try to gain entry. On multiple occasions, O’Keefe suggests migrants in the hotel came into the country illegally and speculates, without offering evidence, that some were being trafficked.

Pajanor reacted to the allegations with exasperation.

“We are helping those individuals who are here legally,” he said. “Every one of them has a notice to appear in a court of law.”

In his video report, O’Keefe included an image of a whiteboard containing the names and contact information of Catholic Charities and their staff.

“Immediately after that post went viral online people started calling team members with threats,” Pajanor said, adding that his team has now increased security at facilities throughout the city — including ones that have nothing to do with migrants.

San Diego Cardinal Robert McElroy condemned O’Keefe’s actions in a statement to RNS. Describing the incident as an “assault” on Catholic Charities, McElroy accused O’Keefe and his team of “illegal entry,” of victimizing legal immigrants and of criticizing the Church for providing food and shelter, “as the Lord commands.” McElroy also condemned the publicizing of staff’s personal identities and data, “subjecting them to death threats and the destruction of their private lives.”

“Christ weeps at the invocation of His name to justify such outrages,” according to McElroy’s emailed statement.

Efforts to reach O’Keefe for comment were unsuccessful.

Catholic Charities officials say the incident is just the latest in a string of attacks on their work.

Similar videos were made by far-right figures at Catholic Charities facilities in Laredo, Texas, and in Southwestern Ohio, prompting a slew of threatening phone calls and leading the organizations to increase security, the directors of both facilities told RNS.

On Oct. 28, 2023, Stew Peters, a far-right influencer who has expressed pro-Nazi views, said in a speech broadcast to his more than 500,000 followers on both Rumble and X that Catholic Charities helps “coach illegals on how to get admitted here.” He then called for shooting Catholic Charities workers, in addition to migrants.

Peters’ speech came after over a year of accusations by a handful of Republican House Representatives that Catholic Charities was complicit in “a secretive, taxpayer-funded, and likely illegal operation to move unknown migrants into the United States.” Often led by Reps. Lance Gooden of Texas and Tom Tiffany of Wisconsin, a small group of GOP lawmakers have penned letters to Biden administration officials echoing those accusations.

[…]

Jared Holt, an expert on political extremism and senior research analyst at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, noted upticks in anti-immigrant rhetoric are common among conservatives during an election year. But when media outlets and personalities home in on specific groups, he said, the situation can escalate quickly.

“To the degree that this might intensify or escalate any more than it has, I think a lot of that depends on how political leaders in this country conduct themselves,” Holt said.

[…]

Both Gooden and Tiffany conducted extensive interviews with Michael Voris, the ousted head of now-defunct far-right Catholic media outlet Church Militant who has also been critical of Catholic Charities and their work with migrants. In addition, Rep. Andy Biggs, who signed the letter asking Catholic Charities and others to preserve documents, hosted Ben Bergquam, a far-right activist, on his podcast last May, where Bergquam accused Catholic Charities of operating as a “middle-man” between drug cartels and the CBP.

The synergism between lawmakers and far-right figures was evident during recent incidents surrounding Casa Alitas, a shelter for asylum-seeking migrants run by Catholic Community Services of Southern Arizona, an agency of Catholic Charities.

As in San Diego, O’Keefe posted a video on X on Feb. 7 outside Casa Alitas, this time disguised, in his words, as a “homeless vagrant drunk.” Bergquam had also previously highlighted Casa Alitas in one of his January videos.

Citing O’Keefe’s video at Casa Alitas, Tiffany and California Rep. Doug LaMalfa visited a Casa Alitas facility two days later and posted their own video, asking employees to allow them to make an unannounced visit, and when turned away, claiming the facility was operating in secrecy and denying them access to information.

Joe Leisz, the director of development for Catholic Community Services of Southern Arizona, said lawmakers visiting Arizona at that time had all been invited to tour the organization’s regular shelter operations. He said Tiffany “chose to show up, unannounced” at a temporary overflow site.

Representatives for Tiffany, Biggs, Gooden and LaMalfa did not respond to interview requests for this story.

Similarly, Rachel Campos-Duffy, co-host of FOX & Friends Weekend and wife of former Wisconsin Congressman Sean Duffy, filmed segments inside and outside Casa Alitas on Feb. 25 and 26, where, after being asked to leave the facility, she approached clients and walked around filming. At one point, she claimed rocks were thrown at her car.

Campos-Duffy showed up outside business hours, and according to Leisz, was asked to come back during regular working hours, something FOX denies.

According to a statement sent to RNS by a FOX News spokesperson, “Rachel Campos-Duffy said she was never told to come back during business hours and was only told to leave the property.”

The videos from O’Keefe, Tiffany and Campos-Duffy each had millions of views on X.

Leisz said that after the incidents, his colleagues received about 75 “obscene and/or threatening calls” over the course of about a month.

When he shared with callers that his organization’s work comes from Matthew 25’s call to care for people in need, including strangers, Leisz said, “they tell me the Gospel is wrong.”

Rebecca Solloa, the executive director of Catholic Charities in Laredo, said that, while the threatening calls her facility had received were not local, she still instructed her staff to take precautions like avoiding wearing Catholic Charities’ apparel in public. “Having seen and learned about what happened in El Paso, anybody can come from the outside to hurt the community,” said Solloa, referencing a 2019 mass shooting that killed 23 and which the shooter said was a response “to the Hispanic invasion of Texas.”

Despite the vitriolic rhetoric and conspiracy theories, Tony Stieritz, the CEO of Catholic Charities Southwestern Ohio, which was the target of a Feb. 9 Bergquam video linking the organization to migrants on the border who said they were going to Cincinnati, said that the over 800 volunteers at his facility fall “in love with the work that we do.”

“We will stand resolute in serving the poor and vulnerable regardless of where they come from,” Stieritz said.

To the members of Congress spreading accusations about Catholic Charities, Stieritz said, “It is Congress’ and the (Biden) administration’s job to fix the broken immigration system. We continue to pick up the pieces for the federal government’s lack of a policy that promotes order and human dignity for migrants.

“Let’s not stoop so low as to pick on the people who are trying to do the Christian work of the Gospel. Please work together in a bipartisan way to figure out the challenges that we all share,” he said.


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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

Post by Del »

Wosbald wrote: 27 Mar 2024, 09:44 +JMJ+

Source: America
Link: americamagazine DOT org/politics-society/2024/03/22/catholic-charities-anti-migrant-harrassment-247571
Threats to Catholic Charities staffers increase amid anti-migrant campaign
Biden is wringing his hands like Emperor Palpatine and saying, "Excellent!"

Okay.... He's wringing his hands more like Monty Burns and saying, "Excellent!"
======================================

Whenever the Rule of Law breaks down catastrophically, violent vigilantism moves in to fill the void.

Biden's unguarded border is part of the Democrats' scheme to unleash chaos again -- in case Democrats lose the next elections. It's going to need to be bigger than Antifa and BLM, this time. They hope to add pro-Hamas Islamists and riots of immigrants to their mix.

Two things are currently working against Biden:
- One is that these Christian charities are working to mitigate the suffering of migrants. Biden wants more suffering, so Democrats can more easily provoke immigrants to riot.
- Also, conservative activists refuse to embrace violence. Biden really wants some sort of "right-wing attack" on Christian charities to happen so he can blame Trump, Republicans, and Christians somehow.

This is why the pseudo-Catholic Democrat media have focused on Assumption House and now these threats, of all the immigration stories they could report. They only want stories that can promote Republicans as the villains.

It's odd that America's report here says that the threat message accused Catholic Charities of being "not really Christian." That's a tell.... there is something inauthentic about this story. Only secular leftists accuse Christians of "being not really Christian."

It is unlikely (but not unsurprising) that we will discover someday that some of these anonymous threats were instigated by the Biden re-election campaign or perhaps some rogue actors in the FBI.
======================================

The only thing that bothers me about my conspiracy theory is that it is not falsifiable in any way. Whatever Biden says or does or doesn't do can be interpreted in the light of his desiring more chaos and violence.... unless he reverses his policies entirely and starts enforcing our immigration laws.

Anyhow, let's watch to see if Catholic Joe comes to the defense of Catholic Charities, with words or actions or "investigations."
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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

Post by Wosbald »

+JMJ+

Source: National Catholic Reporter
Link: ncronline DOT org/news/texas-escalating-efforts-criminalize-migrants-says-bishop-seitz
Texas is escalating efforts to criminalize migrants, says Bishop Seitz

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Mar 28, 2024 — Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's legal efforts to shut down a Catholic migrant shelter network in El Paso, Texas, is the latest example of the Lone Star State trying to criminalize migrants and migration, said El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz.

"The attack on Annunciation House represents an escalation in Texas' efforts in recent years to militarize the border and to enact legislation criminalizing migration and people who migrate," Seitz said during a recent lecture at Fairfield University, a Jesuit institution in Connecticut.

Seitz also referenced controversial enforcement actions that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a conservative Republican who is Catholic, has implemented to highlight the "border crisis" that he and other Republican politicians argue was caused by President Joseph Biden, a Democrat who is also Catholic.

"You have seen the Humvees and the concertina wire and the National Guardsmen on the television," said Seitz, who described those scenes as "transparently political" and part of a "broader, brutal, historical project in Texas to criminalize and police people who migrate."

Said Seitz, "People of faith have a duty to resist these racist projects."

The bishop's March 18 talk was not livestreamed, but the university shared video of the event with NCR.

[…]

Appointed by Pope Francis in 2013 to be the sixth Catholic bishop of El Paso, Seitz told his audience at Fairfield University that the United States' two major political parties nearly enacted a "major legislative assault on our system of asylum and protection at the border."

"This was a moment when serious political leaders considered suspending our obligations to the vulnerable just because they became politically inconvenient," said Seitz, who added that he has become increasingly frustrated at how often "the complexity and nuance at the border are flattened and manipulated" by politicians, pundits and media commentators who speak of migration as a threat.

"Let me be clear," Seitz said. "As someone who lives this reality everyday, this is not just a willful mischaracterization, but is often part of a deliberate historical project of dehumanization at the border."

[…]

The legal battle over Annunciation House, which is still pending in court, galvanized religious leaders and faith-based organizations in a borderland community that encompasses El Paso, Las Cruces, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. The Diocese of El Paso was among several local organizations that hosted a March 22 vigil and march for human dignity in El Paso.

Outspoken in his defense of Annunciation House, Seitz also participated in the vigil. A few days before that event, Seitz told the audience at Fairfield University on March 18 that the El Paso migrant shelter works very closely with parishes and their own migration ministries.

"I issued a strenuous defense of Annunciation House not only because I know the work that the organization does very intimately, but also on account of some more profound, rather more foundational reasons," said Seitz, who reflected on migration in spiritual terms as a "privileged space in which the salvific mystery is being acted out."

Said Seitz, "It is important that the entire church community, the entire Catholic community, in the United States organize a robust, tenacious and unrelenting and eloquent defense of the rights of those who migrate, in season and out."


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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

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+JMJ+

Source: Crux
Link: cruxnow DOT com/church-in-the-usa/2024/03/el-paso-bishop-rhetoric-always-ramps-up-during-election-season
El Paso bishop: ‘Rhetoric always ramps up’ during election season [Interview]

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FAIRFIELD, Connecticut — In Bishop Mark Seitz’s initial response to an attempt by the state of Texas to shut down a Catholic migrant shelter in El Paso, he noted how the situation highlights the challenge such organizations face balancing federal and state responses with their own mission to serve.

“On the one hand, we are challenged by serious federal neglect to provide a safe, orderly and humane response to migration at our southern border,” Seitz, the bishop of El Paso, said in a Feb. 22 statement. “On the other hand, we are now witnessing an escalating campaign of intimidation, fear and dehumanization in the State of Texas.”

Ultimately, a judge determined on March 10 that the shelter, Annunciation House, could remain open while the dispute between it and the state works through the civil court process; a temporary victory. The ruling did not, however, change the reality that faith-based organizations at the border remain caught between a federal government and state at odds with each other.

In a recent conversation with Crux, Seitz expanded on his previous comments noting that those active in politics are misguided in trying to fit the Church into a political box.

“We in the Church often get caught in that kind of effort to divide us politically, when in fact, we are not guided by the political positions that have been staked out by our various parties,” Seitz explained. “We try to be guided by the teachings of our faith and Jesus Christ, and that really is what needs to guide everything we do, and in this area of immigration, I know it’s hard for people who have those political lenses to recognize it sometimes, but this is where we’re coming from.”

Crux spoke with Seitz, who is also the chair of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee on Migration on March 18 at Fairfield University in Fairfield, Connecticut, ahead of a lecture he gave titled “Immigration: The American Story.”

What follows is more from Crux’s conversation with Seitz. It has been edited for length and clarity.

Crux: Has it become more difficult to work with federal and state authorities? As they’ve become more at odds, how have you navigated working with them, having those meetings and discussions?

Seitz: On the local level we actually have very good relationships, even still. On immigration questions we’re working primarily with the federal government agencies like the Border Patrol, CBP, ICE. We work with them on a daily basis. I have cell phone numbers I can call if I need to.

They have their job. I have my ministry, but we realize that we can each do our responsibilities better if we’re in contact with one another. Then, we work of course with local governments, the city and the county El Paso, and they have been great partners as well, and add to that the NGOs and so on, and we’ve got a pretty good group of people who collaborate.

What about the state government? What role do they have in El Paso?

The state has sent the National Guard to our area, and they’ve rolled out razor wire. People need to understand that this isn’t your old-fashioned barbed wire. These are razors attached to metal, and they cause a great deal of harm. The state also sent in the state police, but they have a very limited role in a certain sense because they don’t have the authority to turn people back because of their immigration status. There’s a whole process that’s been set up at the federal level to do exactly that.

[…]

You often talk about the need for comprehensive immigration reform from Congress. Do you fear that it will get kicked further down the road because it’s an election year?

It’s very difficult to predict, but we’re hoping to get through this election cycle because the rhetoric always ramps up at this time, and both political parties are right now buying into policies that we have great concern about in terms of recognizing the basic human rights of those who are coming and making sure that we’re not sending people literally to their deaths by our actions.

So, the election year is tough, and we always hope that there will be calmer, more thoughtful approaches once the election is over and. I think people have good hearts and they would want to find a very humane way of having an orderly border, which we all want, making it possible for people who have to escape for the sake of their lives, and that of their family, to be able to do that, for people who need to work to be able to fill jobs that are not being filled by people in this country but are essential works.

That’s what migrants do, and so we can, we believe, find an orderly and humane response.

[…]


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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

Post by Wosbald »

+JMJ+

Source: Catholic News Agency
Link: catholicnewsagency DOT com/news/257358/el-paso-bishop-criticizes-texas-border-efforts-laments-anti-immigrant-rhetoric
El Paso bishop criticizes Texas border efforts, laments ‘anti-immigrant’ rhetoric

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Apr 12, 2024 — Bishop Mark Seitz of the Diocese of El Paso criticized a Texas law that increases the state’s role in deterring illegal immigration to the United States and denounced “anti-immigrant” rhetoric that he said is rising in the country’s two major political parties.

Seitz, who chairs the Committee on Migration of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), commented on the Lone Star State’s new law during an immigration conference jointly hosted by the Catholic University of America and the USCCB. The April 11 event was titled “Responding to Changing Realities at the U.S. Border and Beyond.”

SB 4, which Gov. Greg Abbott signed in December 2023, makes illegal border crossing a state crime and allows state police to arrest people who enter the United States illegally through Texas. U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration has sued the state over the law based on allegations that it usurps the federal government’s authority to enforce laws related to immigration.

“We’re concerned that this leads to profiling — racial profiling as well,” Seitz said. “It puts fear into every immigrant no matter what their immigration status may be.”

The bishop questioned the constitutionality of the law and how it could be effective without the cooperation of Mexican authorities. He further argued that the law threatens the right to seek asylum by denying the “opportunity to be processed … to see if their claims to asylum are legitimate or not.”

“[We] hope and pray the courts will not cave to the political pressure,” Seitz said.

During his discussion at the conference, the bishop was critical of “anti-immigrant” rhetoric and approaches to policy, which he said now exists in “both parties.” He claimed the media has “misrepresented” the situation at the border, which he said has also stoked anti-immigrant sentiment.

“You’re not going to see chaos [at the border],” Seitz said. “You’re going to see lots of fences and wires and things like that.”

[…]

Speaking to CNA following his remarks at the conference, Seitz said the Catholic Church provides a “beautiful balance” for ensuring the dignity of migrants is respected and that countries can maintain their borders.

“The Church says nations have a right to a border and they have a right and a responsibility to control their border,” the bishop explained. “So we don’t have a problem with that.”

Seitz said, however, that the answer cannot be “to close off the possibility of a legitimate flow across the border.”

“People have a right to migrate when there is a need,” the bishop added.

Other speakers at the conference echoed similar concerns about policy and rhetoric.

Father David Hollenbach, a Jesuit priest and research professor at Georgetown University, cited messages in Scripture about welcoming strangers and argued that the United States has a moral obligation to assist migrants and refugees because the country has the capacity to help in a way that poorer countries do not.

“These people are created in the image and likeness of God,” Hollenbach said during a panel discussion.

[…]

Although the conference focused mostly on an obligation to assist migrants in coming to the country, some Catholics have expressed a more cautious approach to the influx of people who have entered the country between official ports of entry.

Chad Pecknold, a professor of systematic theology at the Catholic University of America, who was not a part of the conference, told CNA that the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas on immigration provide “a sound and reasonable guide for these discussions.”

Referencing Aquinas in the Summa Theologiae, Pecknold recalled that the doctor of the Church “teaches that while hospitality should be offered to the wayfarer passing through, political communities must ensure that those ‘entering to remain’ demonstrate a commitment to the customs, language, religion, and mores of their commonweal.”

“Every human being having dignity does not immediately and obviously supersede the sovereignty of nations,” Pecknold added. “Statesmen have a sacred duty to safeguard the political common good of their country, and this will sometimes mean restricting who can legally enter and remain in their countries,” he noted.


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The News & Topicality Thread

Post by Del »

I mostly consume right-wing news media like Daily Wire, and I'm not seeing this "anti-immigrant rhetoric" that is so prevalent in America, Crux, and National Catholic Reporter.

I suspect that the left-wing media is gaslighting again.
==========================

Let's ignore (for this discussion) the 35% of Americans who are ignorant/idiots.
- These are the 5% to 10% who are genuine bigots who don't like Hispanic immigrants. (I've never met these people, but I'm assured that they must exist.)
- And these are the 25% of university students and recent grads who appear in the polls as "strongly" approving of Joe Biden's performance thus far. Somebody is watching CNN and MSNBC and The View -- and believing what they hear.

That leaves some 65% of Americans who are moderate and reasonable and reasonably well-informed. This moderate and silent majority realize that America has a labor crisis, and this labor crisis is fundamental to the persistent inflation and our long-term prosperity.

As a result, we need a robust and liberal immigration policy. There are millions of Hispanic residents who want to work, who are not legally permitted to work, and who deserve speedy evaluation and opportunity to work. They came here to participate in our common prosperity, and it is a grave injustice to deny this to them. If Biden let them stay, he must let them work.

And we will still need more workers. As established Americans have failed to have children, we need immigrants. Our vibrant economy has plenty of room for those industrious families who want to join us.

We want to re-establish control of our borders so that we can let the good people in and permit them to work at the jobs they want. We want to stop the fentanyl, the human trafficking (especially of child sex slaves), the Chinese spies, and the Islamist terrorists.

So beware of the BIG LIE. The BIG LIE is that our desire for a well-controlled border is somehow "anti-immigration rhetoric."

Wires, walls and fences are not anti-immigration. But they are anti-mayhem. We want to end Biden's chaos at our borders. We want to take control of our borders away from the cartels and have just and orderly immigration processes -- for the benefit of immigrant families and established Americans.
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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

Post by Wosbald »

+JMJ+

Title: Bishop Seitz: Look at the border through the eyes of migrants [In-Depth]
Source: America
Link: americamagazine DOT org/faith/2024/04/15/bishop-seitz-border-immigration-247655

The Money-Quotes:
Let us consider an emerging situation at the border right now. As you may know, the attorney general of Texas has made efforts to shutter a longstanding migrant hospitality center on the U.S.–Mexico border, Annunciation House. This Catholic organization has a history of engaging in this work for more than 45 years and works very closely with our parishes and parish migrant shelter centers in El Paso. Very early on in this legal battle, I issued a strenuous defense of Annunciation House, not only because I know the work that the organization does very intimately but also because of some more foundational reasons.

The attack on Annunciation House represents an escalation in Texas’ efforts in recent years to militarize the border and to enact legislation criminalizing migration and people who migrate. You have seen the Humvees and the concertina wire and the National Guard soldiers on television. While these actions are transparently political, they are serious. I must tell you that people are dying in El Paso because of these efforts, in the river and in the desert. I have administered the last rites to them. And as I mentioned earlier, they are part of a broader brutal historical project in Texas to criminalize and police people who migrate, people of color.

People of faith have a duty to resist these racist projects.

There are two additional reasons I would like to mention. The first is that Texas’ efforts constitute a direct attack on a faith-based provider and an attack on the ability of people of faith to put into practice deeply held religious convictions. This is not just a reflexive defense of our own institutions. We need to be prepared to more forcefully engage on this front because this is not an isolated episode. But on a deeper level, conscience is the last bulwark against dehumanization — and when it is threatened, it should alarm us all. And the church must respond.

Religion and people of faith have historically been the motor of change toward a more just and compassionate society in the United States, and the muzzling of this voice in our political climate raises fundamental concerns.

The last reason I have felt a duty to speak out in defense of Annunciation House is because the state of Texas is now attacking the Christian act of hospitality. I spoke earlier about Pope Francis and his spiritual point of departure. His practical point of departure has been to engage directly with vulnerable people on the move, to go to the global hot spots of migration — to borders, to the places where the rubber hits the road for those who migrate, the places where international conventions and the rule of law are often suspended — but also to places of hospitality. The Holy Father has a perceptive sense of the injustice of the global barriers we erect against people who migrate, the injustice of the walls and detention centers. For this reason, he has leaned in with his personal visits and shows of support to places of hospitality. For Pope Francis, acts of hospitality are not just acts of mercy but acts of reparative justice. As he has said, in touching the flesh of the poor, we touch Jesus. This is where the people of God are called to be today.

[…]

While we need to be engaged in the fight for immigration reform on the national level through federal advocacy, that is not sufficient. We need to ensure that the church is actually engaged in the building up of the reign of God by prophetically proclaiming and creatively enacting justice and mercy, allowing ourselves to be knit back together for the healing of the world. As the Rev. James Cone used to ask, ​​does the church have anything to say to the world at this time?

Migration is a privileged space in which this salvific mystery is being acted out. If the church is not present in this arena, the proclamation of the Gospel is truncated. And this should take place not only on the border but throughout the country, in acts of hospitality, in organizing on a local level for more just policies, in opening up spaces where the flesh of Christ can be touched in encounter with the poor. This can reset and reframe the church’s advocacy, making it more credible and giving it more depth.


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Antisemitism / Fascism

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Source: Crux
Link: cruxnow DOT com/church-in-the-usa/2024/04/columbia-universitys-catholic-chaplain-says-anti-semitism-must-be-stopped
Columbia University’s Catholic chaplain says anti-Semitism must be stopped’

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NEW YORK — Amid pro-Palestine protests at Columbia University that have led to more than 100 arrests, forced classes online, and left Jewish students and faculty feeling unsafe and unwelcome, the university’s Catholic chaplain says the path forward “must first ensure that such malevolent protests, brimming with anti-Semitism, be stopped.”

“The solution is going to require prioritizing among values and being more clear and decisive,” Father Roger Landry told Crux via email late on April 22. “I think that the educational mission of the university and the safety and protection of its students have to be vigorously defended, rather than, de facto, allowing protests to control the university’s agenda and milieu.”

[…]

Landry, who is Columbia’s Catholic chaplain, said that while many protests have remained peaceful, many have also turned “ugly, as some in the crowds chant and behave in ways inimical to peace on campus, in the Middle East, or anywhere.”

“If the protests happening on and around Columbia’s campus were peaceful, I don’t think Jewish students would feel endangered,” Landry said. “Protests that feature pro-Hamas slogans or justifications for Hamas’ Oct. 7 attacks, that chant ‘From the River to the Sea’ that Jewish students interpret as a call for the elimination of the State of Israel, and that praise the Al-Qassam brigades are not peaceful, but downright hostile.”

Landry said he has “concern and sadness over what’s happening.” He said he laments that at a time in which students should be preparing for exams, writing final papers and enjoying spring, the campus is essentially under lockdown, Jewish students feel unsafe and unwelcome, student protestors are getting arrested, and classes are being canceled or moved online. On April 23, the university announced that students will have the option to attend class remotely for the rest of the semester.

Landry also lamented that “division, hostility and class warfare are being fomented, and various outside elements are trying to use Columbia as a backdrop to push their political agendas.”

“The students who have come here for an education are being forgotten, it seems, by those in positions of leadership on all sides, as the toxic animosities of Middle Eastern conflicts have overflowed onto campus,” Landry, a priest of the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts, said. “The principles, prudence and courage necessary to help resolve the conflict have been wanting.”

Current protests at Columbia University boiled over last week, when students set up an encampment on the university’s South Lawn to oppose Israel’s military action in Gaza, and demand that the university divest from companies with ties to Israel. Ultimately, more than 100 demonstrators were arrested after the university called in police to help dispel the crowd.

Protests have continued this week, with protestors also now there to stand in solidarity with those arrested last week. On April 23, about 150 demonstrators were arrested for defying a university order to leave.

Landry said that when he’s passed the current encampment at Columbia University it has been “tranquil, and a more silent form of protest.” The challenge, he said, is that it shows no signs of shutting down on its own and that “every day that nothing happens in consequence, some among the protestors get bolder.”

“Under the present dynamics, it seems bound to grow,” Landry said.

In his role as a Catholic leader on Columbia’s campus, Landry said he is working with the university’s Catholic students to help them recognize the importance of prayer and love, and that they’re called to be peacemakers. He also said he is helping students focus on what they can do to improve the situation, and informing them of how Pope Francis and the Holy See have addressed the war.

“We’re praying each day for the situation and trying to reach out to those immediately affected — Jewish students, Palestinian students and those from Gaza and others — to make sure they know we have their back,” Landry said.


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The Right to Migrate / Fascism

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Source: Catholic News Agency
Link: catholicnewsagency DOT com/news/257443/catholic-charities-denies-its-purchase-of-airfare-for-migrants-was-misuse-of-federal-funds
Catholic Charities denies its purchase of airfare for migrants was misuse of federal funds

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Apr 19, 2024 — Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of San Antonio is denying recent accusations that it misused federal taxpayer funds by paying for migrants’ airfare.

This comes after two South Texas members of Congress, Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Democrat, and Rep. Monica de la Cruz, a Republican, accused the San Antonio Catholic relief group of an inappropriate use of funds made available to it by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

Jose Antonio Fernandez, CEO of Catholic Charities San Antonio, confirmed to CNA that the group did indeed help migrants with air travel from San Antonio to other locations in the United States, but he claimed that this was a licit use of funds under FEMA’s rules.

[…]

Fernandez responded to these allegations by telling CNA that “we have never misused the funding because the funding was given to us to provide transportation.”

According to Fernandez, the Emergency Food and Shelter Program (EFSP) FEMA grant given to Catholic Charities of San Antonio “clearly stated that you could provide transportation.”

“The funds were given to us to provide food, clothing, all these activities, including transportation,” he said.

“It’s not my interpretation, it is a fact; many companies in the U.S. provide transportation because it is allowed,” he said. “If you contact FEMA, they will tell you that, yes, you are actually allowed to provide transportation.”

CNA reached out to FEMA about its regulations but did not immediately receive a response.

[…]

Tony Wen, a representative for Cuellar, declined to comment further on the matter but did clarify that the congressman “never said they were misusing funds” and that particular verbiage was only used by de la Cruz.

Despite this, Wen said that Cuellar still stands by his comments about the intended use of federal funds.

A proponent of funding for humanitarian relief at the border, Cuellar recently helped advance an appropriations bill that granted San Antonio Catholic Charities and other border relief groups hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funds.

Catholic Charities of San Antonio alone received $10,877,226 from the appropriations bill. Ten other Catholic relief groups at or near the southern border also received federal funding from the same appropriations bill, totaling tens of millions of dollars.

Cuellar and several other lawmakers issued a statement after securing the funding in which they praised Catholic Charities of San Antonio and other similar groups as a “lifeline” in the face of the “historic number of people being displaced from Latin America.”


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