Archbishop
Jose Gomez of Los Angeles, the Chairman of The United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops Committee on Migration, issued the following letter in
response to the immigration debate currently taking place in the halls of
Congress. Archbishop Sheehan has asked
us to share it with you today.
“This
week the U.S. Senate begins a historic debate on immigration reform
legislation. It is an important time for
our country. The outcome of this debate
– and of the one to follow in the House of Representatives – will impact the
future of our nation in the twenty-first century and beyond.
The
Catholic Church in America has an important stake in the outcome of this debate
because we are an immigrant church, and have grown with the country for over
two hundred years. Each day in our
parishes, social service programs, hospitals, and schools we witness the human
consequences of a broken immigration system.
Families are separated, migrant workers are exploited, and our fellow
human beings die in the desert. Without
positive change to our immigration laws, we cannot help our brothers and
sisters. Simply put, the status quo is
morally unacceptable. This suffering
must end.
Our
nation has a stark choice. We can
continue on our current path, which employs an immigration system that does not
serve the rule of law or the cause of human rights, or we can create a system
which honors both principles. We can
maintain a system that forces illegal behavior and undermines the law, or
fashion one that provides incentives for legal behavior and is based upon
fairness and opportunity.
Our
nation must answer several questions.
Do
we want a country with a permanent underclass, without the same rights as the
majority?
Do
we want to continue to separate children from parents, creating a generation of
young U.S. citizens who are suspicious and fearful of their government?
Do
we want a nation that accepts the toil and taxes of undocumented workers
without offering them the protection of the law?
The
answer to these questions, of course, is a resounding no.
I
encourage our elected officials to move forward and debate immigration reform
in a civil and respectful way. The U.S.
Catholic bishops are committed to working with them to enact humane immigration
reform legislation as soon as possible.
In the end, the outcome of this debate will not only affect our nation’s
future – it will impact our soul.”
Thank
you.
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