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Excerpts from
Strangers No Longer: Together on the
Journey of HopeThe
following excerpts are from
Strangers No Longer: Together on the
Journey of Hope, a joint statement from the Catholic Bishops
of Mexico and the United States.
Why We Speak
- We speak as two Episcopal conferences
but as one Church, united in the view that migration is necessary and
beneficial. At the same time, some aspects of the migrant experience are
far from the vision of the Kingdom of God that Jesus proclaimed: many
persons who seek to migrate are suffering, and, in some cases, dying;
human rights are abused; families are kept apart; and racist and
xenophobic attitudes remain. (Page 1, Paragraph 2)
- As pastors to more than . sixty-five
million U.S. Catholics, we witness the human consequences of migration
in the life of society every day. We witness the vulnerability of our
people involved in all sides of the migration phenomenon, including
families devastated by the loss of loved ones....and children left alone
when parents are removed from them. (Page 1-2, Paragraph 4)
- Migrants and immigrants are in our
parishes and in our communities. In both our countries, we see much
injustice and violence against them and much suffering and despair among
them because civil and church structures are still inadequate to
accommodate their needs. (Page 2, Paragraph 5)
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To Whom We Speak
- We speak to migrants who are forced to
leave their lands to provide for their families or to escape
persecution. We stand in solidarity with you. We commit ourselves to
your pastoral care and to work towards changes in church and societal
structures that impede your exercising your dignity and living as
children of God. (Page 3, Paragraph 9)
- We speak to public officials in both
nations, from those who hold the highest offices to those who encounter
the migrant on a daily basis. We thank our nations presidents for the
dialogue they have begun in an effort to humanize the migration
phenomenon. (Page 3, Paragraph 10) We ask our presidents to continue
negotiations on migration issues to achieve a system of migration
between the two countries that is more generous, just, and humane. (Page
48, Paragraph 104)
- Finally, we speak to the peoples of the
United States and Mexico. Our two nations are more interdependent than
ever before in our history, sharing cultural and social values, common
interests, and hopes for the future. Our nations have a singular
opportunity to act as true neighbors and to work together to build a
more just and generous immigration system. (Page 3, Paragraph 12)
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Catholic Social Teachings
- All persons have the right to find in
their own countries the economic, political, and social opportunities to
live in dignity and achieve a full life through the use of their
God-given gifts. In this context, work that provides a just, living wage
is a basic human need. (Page 15, Paragraph 34)
- The Church recognizes the right of
sovereign nations to control their territories but rejects such control
when it is exerted merely for the purpose of acquiring additional
wealth. More powerful economic nations, which have the ability to
protect and feed their residents, have a stronger obligation to
accommodate migration flows. (Page 15, Paragraph 36)
- The Church recognizes that all goods of
the earth belong to all people. When persons cannot find employment in
their country of origin to support themselves and their families, they
have a right to find work elsewhere in order to survive. Sovereign
nations should provide ways to accommodate this right. (Page 15,
Paragraph 35)
- Those who flee wars and persecution
should be protected by the global community. This requires, at a
minimum, that migrants have a right to claim refugee status without
incarceration and to have their claims fully considered by a competent
authority. (Page 16, Paragraph 37)
- Regardless of their legal status,
migrants, like all persons, possess inherent human dignity which should
be respected. Government policies that respect the basic human rights of
the undocumented are necessary. (Page 16, Paragraph 38)
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Policy Recommendations
Globalization and Economic
Development
- Now is the time for both the United
States and Mexico to confront the reality of globalization and to work
toward the globalization of solidarity. Both governments have recognized
the integration of economic interests through the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA). It is now time to harmonize policies on the
movement of people, particularly in a way that respects the human
dignity of the migrant and recognizes the social consequences of
globalization. (Page 31, Paragraph 57)
- The creation of employment opportunities
in Mexico would help to reduce poverty and would mitigate the incentive
for many migrants to look for employment in the United States. The
implementation of economic policies in Mexico that create living wage
jobs is vital, especially for citizens without advanced skills. (Page
32, Paragraph 61)
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Family-Based Immigration
- The U.S. legal immigration system places
per-country limits on visas for family members of U.S. legal permanent
residents from Mexico. Spouses and parents thus face a difficult
decision: either honor their moral commitment to family and migrate to
the United States without documentation, or wait in the system and face
indefinite separation from loved ones. This is an unacceptable choice,
and a policy which encourages undocumented migration. A new
framework must be established that will give Mexican families more
opportunities to legally reunited with their loved ones in the United
States. (Page 33-34, Paragraphs 65-66)
Legalization of the Undocumented
- A broad legalization program of the
undocumented would benefit not only the migrants but also both nations.
Legalization represents sound public policy and should be featured in
any migration agreement between the United States and Mexico. In order
to ensure fairness for all nationalities, the U.S. Congress should enact
a legalization program for immigrants regardless of their country of
origin. (Page 35, Paragraphs 69-70)
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Employment-Based Immigration
- In order to prevent future abuse of
workers, any new temporary worker program must afford Mexican and other
foreign workers wage levels and employment benefits that are sufficient
to support a family in dignity; must include worker protections and job
portability that U.S. workers have; must allow for family unity; must
employ labor-market tests to ensure that U.S. workers are protected; and
must grant workers the ability to move easily and securely between the
United States and their homelands. It must employ strong enforcement
mechanisms to protect worker = s rights and give workers the option to
become lawful permanent residents after a specific amount of time.
Reform in worker programs must be coupled with a broad-based
legalization program. (Page 36-37, Paragraphs 72, 75)
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Enforcement Policies
- Alarmingly, migrants often are treated
as criminals by civil enforcement authorities. Misperceptions and
xenophobic and racist attitudes in both the United States and Mexico
contribute to an atmosphere in which undocumented persons are
discriminated against and abused. Reports of physical abuse of migrants
by U.S. Border Patrol agents, the Mexican authorities and, in some
cases, U.S. and Mexican residents, are all too frequent, including the
use of excessive force and the shackling of migrants = hands and feet.
(Page 39, Paragraph 80)
- In order to address these excesses, both
governments must create training mechanisms that instruct enforcement
agents in the use of appropriate tactics for enforcing immigration law.
We urge the U.S. and Mexican governments to include human rights
curricula in their training regimens so that immigration enforcement
personnel are more sensitive to the handling of undocumented migrants.
(Page 41, Para. 85)
- We urge both the U.S. and Mexican
enforcement authorities to abandon the type of strategies that give rise
to smuggling operations and migrant deaths. Care should be taken not to
push migrants to routes in which their lives may be in danger. We also
urge more concerted efforts to root out smuggling enterprises at their
source using a wide range of intelligence and investigative tactics.
(Page 43, Paragraph 89)
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Due Process
- In 1996, the U.S. Congress eviscerated
due process rights for migrants with the passage of the Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA), which
authorizes the detention and deportation of migrants for relatively
minor offenses, even after they have served their sentences. We urge the
U.S. Congress to revisit this law and to make appropriate changes
consistent with due process rights. We also urge the Mexican government
to honor the right to due process for all those who are in the country,
specifically documented and undocumented migrants who do not now enjoy
due process and who may be removed from the country for arbitrary
reasons. (Page 44, Paragraphs 92-93)
Protection of Asylum Seekers
- We restate our long-held position that
asylum seekers and refugees should have access to qualified adjudicators
who will objectively consider their pleas. We urge both countries to
take a leadership role in the Regional Conference on Migration (
Puebla Process) and to work with our Central American neighbors to
ensure that asylum seekers and refugees throughout our hemisphere have
access to appropriate due process protections consistent with
international law. (Page 46, Paragraph 99)
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Consequences of September 11
- The terrorist attacks of September 11,
2001, have placed national security concerns at the forefront of the
migration debate and have added another dimension to the migration
relationship between the United States and Mexico. We urge both nations
to cooperate in this area, but not to enact joint policies that
undermine human rights, reduce legal immigration, or deny asylum seekers
opportunities for protection. (Page 46, Paragraph 100)
Pastoral Recommendations
- The Church should encourage these
broad-based efforts to provide both a comprehensive network of social
services and advocacy for migrant families. A special call is issued for
lawyers in both our countries to assist individuals and families in
navigating the arduous immigration process and to defend the rights of
migrants, especially those in detention. (Page 22, Paragraph 44)
- Ideally, local parishes should ensure
that sacramental preparation is available to people on the move, making
special provisions for them given their transitory lives of following
work wherever it leads. (Page 23, Paragraph 47)
- Careful and generous cooperation between
dioceses is important to provide priests and religious who are suited
for this important ministry. Guidelines for their training and reception
by the host diocese must be developed jointly with the diocese that
sends them. (Page 25, Paragraph 50)
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Conclusion
- We recognize the phenomenon of migration
as an authentic sign of the times. We see it in both our countries
through the suffering of those who have been forced to become migrants
for many reasons. To such a sign we must respond in common and creative
ways so that we may strengthen the faith, hope, and charity of migrants
and all the people of God. (Page 47, Paragraph 102)
- We ask our presidents to continue
negotiations on migration issues to achieve a system of migration
between the two countries that is more generous, just, and humane. We
call for legislatures of our two countries to effect a conscientious
revision of the immigration laws and to establish a binational system
that accepts migration flows, guaranteeing the dignity and human rights
of the migrant. (Page 48, Paragraph 104)
- We stand in solidarity with you, our
migrant brothers and sisters, and we will continue to advocate on your
behalf for just and fair migration policies. We commit ourselves to
animate communities of Christ's disciples on both sides of the border
to accompany you and your journey so that yours will truly be a journey
of hope, not of despair, and so that, at the point of arrival, you will
experience that you are strangers no longer and instead members of God's household. (Page 49, Paragraph 106)
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For a complete version of the
"Strangers No Longer: Together on the Journey of Hope",
a joint statement from the Catholic Bishops of Mexico and the
United States, please enter
here.
June 09, 2005
Act Now!
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