Cardinal Tagle: Don't raise up
walls, we all have migrant blood
Cardinal Tagle speaking with Vatican News aout Caritas Internationalis' "Share the Journey" campaign. |
Caritas Internationalis, an international confederation of
Catholic aid agencies, is launching a “Week of Global Action” as part of its
Share the Journey campaign “to make a positive difference to everyone with
experience of migration.”
By Vatican News
The Share the Journey campaign, which began
last September, is inspired by Pope Francis’ call to join the “culture of
encounter,” with the goal of “increasing the spaces and opportunities for
migrants and local communities to meet, talk, and take action.” Caritas says,
“We must be welcoming and speak up for the rights of migrants.” The initiative
encourages local communities, beginning with parishes, to undertake concrete
actions of solidarity, such as sharing lunch with migrants and refugees, and
speaking out for their rights.
To emphasize the importance of the Share the
Journey campaign, Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, Archbishop of Manila
and President of Caritas Internationalis, spoke with Alessandro Gisotti of
Vatican News.
A dramatic international phenomenon
“Migration is a fact of life,” Cardinal Tagle said, “But in
these recent years, it has become a dramatic international phenomenon.” Both
Pope Francis and Caritas Internationalis, he continued, “have this advocacy of
welcoming and accompanying migrants, first because they are human beings, and
through our humane treatment of the migrants, we want to show the world that
this is not just a political economic problem, it is a human problem.”
A second motive for that advocacy, Cardinal Tagle said, is
the Christian Faith. Israel was a migrant people; and, in the New Testament,
Jesus was close to outsiders. “He even said, if you do this to the least of My
brothers and sisters, if you welcome the stranger. You’re welcoming Me.” So
there are both human and spiritual reasons for efforts to assist minors.
Extra courage and motivation
Asked about his hopes for the campaign, Cardinal Tagle said,
“We are very happy to note that in many countries now, where the episcopal
conferences, and the national caritas organizations have picked up the Shared
Journey campaign, it is slowly spreading.” He said he was happy to see that
wherever local Caritas organizations are found, new programs are moving ahead:
“I am very pleased to say that bishops and local caritas organizations, even on
the parish level, have been given extra courage and motivation by the
campaign.”
"Go and meet a migrant"
Cardinal Tagle also spoke about the challenge presented by
those who fear migrants, and governments that raise walls to stop immigration.
It is clear, he said, that the migration issue is very complex; “and so we
understand the various reactions.”
But he encouraged those who are concerned about migration to
“go and meet a migrant.” Sometimes, he said, “we discuss migration as an idea,
as a concept, but it is different when you see a migrant, when you hear their
stories, when you touch their hands. And then you realize their stories could
be your story. You could see yourself in them.”
Finally, he invited everyone to remember their own
histories, to not forget the migrants in their own family histories. “If we
only remember how our forefathers were accepted to start a new life in other
countries, maybe we would be a bit more open.”
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