German archbishop:
'solidarity with vulnerable refugees fading'
![]() |
| A refugee in a school room in a transit center for refugees in Bavaria (AFP) |
The 4th Catholic Refugee Summit in Essen highlights the need
to tackle xenophobic tendencies and populism.
By Linda Bordoni
“Racism and xenophobia are in contradiction to the message
of Jesus” said the Archbishop of Hamburg at the opening of a summit in Germany
on the challenges of welcoming and assisting refugees and migrants.
The 4th Catholic Refugee Summit that took
place in Essen this week saw the participation of some 150 representatives of
national and diocesan Caritas offices, host communities and volunteers.
Challenge of xenophobia
Lectures, workshops and a panel discussion focused on how
the Church deals with the challenge of xenophobia as it assists those who have
been forced to flee their homes.
Hamburg Archbishop, Stefan Hesse, who is also special
representative for refugee issues and chairman of the Migration Commission of
the German Bishops’ Conference, noted that “especially in difficult times, when
charity and solidarity with people seeking protection seem to have faded, the
fact that many church representatives and refugee aid workers have gathered
here is a source of inspiration and strength.”
He recalled that the first summit in 2015 was an opportunity
to exchange views after the great migration of that summer saying: “we experienced
a wave of solidarity, support and compassion in Germany”.
This, the Archbishop continued, developed into a forum for
discussion, especially about the welcome of many people who had fled their home
countries to escape war and civil conflicts.
Financial investments
Archbishop Hesse revealed that in 2018, the Catholic Church
in Germany spent around 125.5 million Euros to provide long and short-term
assistance to refugees.
The money, he explained, was invested both in domestic and
foreign projects. He said that the budget is diminishing because numerous
programmes for first assistance have expired and refugee work has increasingly
become “regular work”.
Hesse reminded those present that big challenges remain to
be faced as integration is a long-term task: “Currently our society seems to be
divided” with xenophobic ideas threatening to spread to the middle classes, he
said.
Sometimes, he noted, even in Catholic communities, refugees
and migrants fear alienation. Therefore, he stressed, the need to tackle
xenophobic tendencies and right-wing populism is one of the current challenges
facing the Church’s mission to provide aid to refugees.

Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét