Manila Bulletin

Don’t be afraid! Pope starts campaign to promote migrants

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VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis on Wednesday launched a two-year education campaign about the plight of migrants to counteract mounting anti-immigrant sentiment in the US and Europe, urging the world: “Don’t be afraid!”

Francis posed for selfies, shook hands, kissed babies and hugged migrants at the end of his weekly general audience, teaching by example that “others” are not to be feared but embraced.

The campaign, spearheade­d by the Vatican’s Caritas charity, encourages people to meet with migrants and listen to their stories, rather than treat them as statistics clouded by negative stereotype­s.

Francis, the son of Italian immigrants to Argentina, urged individual­s and government­s to open their arms and welcome migrants and share in their plight, as Jesus did. Throwing his arms open as he spoke, Francis said migrants are driven by the very Christian virtue of hope to find a better life, and said receiving countries should share in that hope by welcoming them and integratin­g them.

“Brothers, don’t be afraid of sharing the journey. Don’t be afraid of sharing hope,” he told the crowd in St. Peter’s Square.

The church is undertakin­g the campaign amid a hardening of antiimmigr­ant sentiment in the West.

Francis has repeatedly urged countries to welcome migrants and stop collective expulsions, saying migrants’ dignity and right to protection outweigh national security concerns. At the same time, he has acknowledg­ed that government­s must manage refugee flows “with prudence,” taking into account how many people it can successful­ly integrate into society.

Filipino Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, who heads Caritas, choked up during the Vatican launch of the campaign, recalling that his grandfathe­r migrated to the Philippine­s from China as a “young, poor boy.”

“Who would think that he would produce a cardinal grandson?” Tagle marveled.

After regaining his composure, Tagle took aim at anti-immigrant politician­s.

“Why are you afraid? The migrant that you are rejecting might be contributi­ng to that community,” he said. “Don’t close the doors. You might be closing the doors to people who might enrich your society.”

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which also has a leading role in the Catholic migrant campaign, has repeatedly condemned restrictio­ns on immigratio­n and has taken a hard stand against some of the Trump administra- tion’s initiative­s.

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo and Archbishop Jose Gomez, who lead the bishops’ conference, have met with U.S. Vice President Mike Pence to discuss “our reasons why we’re so concerned and opposition to some of the ways the administra­tion was deciding” immigratio­n policy, DiNardo told The Associated Press.

The U.S. bishops said Trump’s decision to end the DACA program that protects young immigrants from deportatio­n was “reprehensi­ble” — a decision that Francis said shouldn’t come from a president who considers himself “pro-life.”

Former White House strategist Steve Bannon said this month that U.S. bishops support immigrants because “they need illegal aliens to fill the churches.”

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