CERAO-RECOWA: The Church in
Africa must welcome, protect, promote and integrate
Nigerian Jesuit Priest, Fr. Ikechi Ikena of the Dicastery for Human Development greeting Pope Francis |
Nigerian Jesuit priest, Fr. Ikechi Ikena of the Holy See’s
Migration and Refugees Section at the Dicastery for Integral Human Development
has invited West African Bishops to arm themselves, in the pastoral care of
migrants and displaced persons, with the four action verbs of Pope Francis,
which are: “To welcome, to protect, to promote and to integrate.”
Cédric Mouzou, SJ - Vatican City
In his intervention at the Plenary Assembly of the Regional
Episcopal Conference of West Africa, CERAO-RECOWA, being held in Ouagadougou
-Burkina Faso, Father Ikena began by recalling the biblical context of
migration with humankind’s first parents, Adam and Eve. “Human mobility seems
to be a consequence of the fall of our first parents who became migrants after
being expelled from their home for disobedience,” said the Nigerian Jesuit.
Referring to a recent message of Cardinal John Onaiyekan,
the Archbishop of Abuja in Nigeria, Fr. Ikena said that the best way to curb
migration was to improve things in the countries of origin.
Improve living conditions for young people
“Migrants, most of whom are young, are not an abstract set
of ideas, but real people with real lives, all created by God,” said the
priest. He regretted the living conditions of young migrant victims of abuse
who are forced to leave because of the precariousness of life in their
respective countries.
Fr. Ikena endorsed an interview on 5 May 2019 in which the
Archbishop of Abuja blamed the Nigerian government for the massive departure of
the youth. The Archbishop noted that the reasons that make the land unlivable for
young people were “the disobedience of the rulers to the commandments of God,
their personal sins and the sins of the institutions they have created to serve
their personal interests,” Cardinal Onaiyekan was quoted as saying.
The Church will be judged on the character of the care she
gives to migrants
The Church has a role to play. Migration whether voluntary
or irregular has become a human phenomena. Father Ikena recalled that God did
not abandon humankind to its destiny after the fall of Adam and Eve. On the
contrary, God has continued to protect humanity. With this argument, Fr. Ikena
invited the Church in West Africa, “to manifest the character of God, by not
abandoning migrants in their vulnerabilities.”
According to the Jesuit priest, the responsibility of the
Church is twofold: It must accompany migrants at every stage of their
migration. On the other hand, the Church must also continuously challenge and
urge the leaders of countries whose decisions and actions make their countries
uninhabitable for their young people. Father Ikena drew the Bishops’ attention
to the fact that to perform these roles exceptionally, the Church herself must
be irreproachable. Migrants, he said, are part of the Lord’s flock. And “the
Church will be judged on the character and extent of care she provides to its
most vulnerable of herds, such as migrants.” The question that resurfaces is
this: “How can the Church, as a family of God in Africa, accompany millions of
vulnerable young people on the move?” Father Ikena invited the Bishops to find
the answer in the four words of Pope Francis: Welcome, Protect, Promote and
Integrate.
The Church in Africa must “Welcome, Protect, Promote and
Integrate.”
In a difficult socio-political context characterised by
abuse of power and bad governance, Fr. Ikena invited the West African Bishops
to inculcate a welcoming spirit in their communities for migrants and displaced
persons. Since we cannot welcome a person we have never known, the Church
in West Africa must learn to identify and accompany young people “who are
experiencing rapid and difficult transformations.” The youth ministry, Fr.
Ikena said, has “the unique opportunity to listen with an open mind to the
rhythms of the hearts of our young people who naively contemplate migration.”
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