Compassionate Immigration Reform

Compassionate Immigration Reform

Date and Time

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

This event occurred in the past

  • Wednesday, September 25, 2013 at 12:15 p.m.

Location

Virtual

5998 Alcala Park San Diego, CA 92110

Cost

0

Sponsor(s)

Details

On Wednesday, September 25, USD will join Catholic colleges and universities across the country in a special day of prayer for Compassionate Immigration Reform.

Join us as we pray for all those impacted by current immigration policies as well as the creation of a more humane and compassionate immigration system. Special prayers will be offered at the 12:15 p.m. Daily Mass in Founders Chapel, during a prayer vigil that will begin at 8 p.m. outside the Student Life Pavilion, and during the Mass for Peace at 9 p.m. in Founders Chapel.   

More Information

“The measure of the greatness of a society is found in the way it treats those most in need.” This statement, offered in July by Pope Francis during his visit to one of Brazil’s favelas, or shanty towns, expresses powerfully one of the core principles of Catholic Social Thought -- as well the Catholic perspective on immigration reform.

In late June, just before Pope Francis travelled to Brazil, the U.S. Senate passed a bipartisan plan intended to reform our country’s immigration policies. While the Senate bill is not perfect, it is notable that it calls for a 13-year path to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrations already in the country. The House of Representatives has yet to take up the issue, a necessary step before an immigration reform law can be completed, signed by the President and implemented.

The 11 million people here without documentation are like the men and women who have come to America for generations in search of a better life for themselves and their families. As a nation of immigrants, we take great pride in being a country that welcomes people of good will. Nowhere is this pride more evident than in our Statue of Liberty.

Yet, our current immigration system is profoundly broken, unjust and dehumanizing. It leads directly to hundreds of migrants dying in the American desert each year. It tears families apart and leaves those without documentation vulnerable to a wide variety of abuse, mistreatment and oppression.

Our concern for migrants and refugees has its foundation in Scripture. The Old Testament poignantly depicts Moses and the Jewish people in exile and the Holy Family as an archetype for refugees everywhere. The prophets are passionate in their defense of the poor and the demand that they be treated justly. And the Gospel, of course, reminds us that when we welcome the stranger, we welcome Christ. These and other Biblical texts challenge us to recognize and reverence the human dignity of our sisters and brothers who journey to the U.S. as migrants.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan has summarized immigration reform as “Helping immigrants contribute to American life and answering the Gospel call to ‘welcome the stranger.’” Along with the other U.S. Bishops, Dolan has called for various reforms to our immigration system: a generous, earned path to citizenship; making family reunification a priority; protecting the integrity of our borders; securing due process for immigrants and their families; improving refugee protection and asylum laws; and addressing the root causes of unauthorized immigration.”

This Wednesday at USD will be a day of prayer for Compassionate Immigration Reform. Please join us as we pray for all those who suffer under the current policies, as well as for the creation of a system that better reflects our values and beliefs.