Sisters in St. Louis, MO participate in a Solidarity March with Immigrants and Refugees April 2017. |
In
response to the suffering and precarious situation of immigrant and refugee
communities in our world today, our Congregation issued a Congregational
Statement in Support of Immigrants, Migrants, and Refugees earlier this year.
In it we
declare that, “we are a congregation
founded by immigrants, for immigrants,” and clearly state our support “for and with our brothers and sisters who
still have the trust and courage to leave all that they know and love to build
a better life for themselves and others.”
This
solidarity with our immigrant and refugee brothers and sisters is not new for
the congregation. Incarnate Word Sisters
have been engaged in this ministry for years. We remember the initiatives,
value the efforts, and offer gratitude for the service and dedication of Srs. Jean
Durel, Guadalupe Moreno, Guadalupe Ruiz, Peggy Bonnot, Margaret Snyder, Bertha Flores, Maria
Luisa Gamboa, Ana Luisa Prieto, Maricela Martinez, Rosallen Harold, Anne Marie
Burke, Yolanda Tarango among others.
We
continue working together with other people, organizations, and institutions to
defend the human rights to land, home, and work.
Here is
the full text of the Congregational Statement:
The call of the Congregation of the Sisters of
Charity of the Incarnate Word is to make the love of God as shown in the
Incarnation a real and tangible presence in the world today. This means that we have a particular
responsibility to practice the love of Jesus as shown in the Gospels, in the
present and in our own reality, wherever we are.
The love of Jesus was inclusive and compassionate,
especially toward the poor and those most in danger of being cast aside because
they were considered dangerous or different.
Jesus said, “Whatever you did for one of these least of mine, you did
for me” (Matthew 25:40). In instructing
the Israelites on living holy and just lives, God said: “The foreigner who lives among you must be
treated like one of your own. Love them
as you love yourself, for you too were a foreigner in the land of Egypt”
(Leviticus 19:34).
Recent actions against our brothers and sisters who
are considered to be alien, dangerous, different, and a threat to the status
quo has caused great fear and suffering.
Any time a group of people is separated from the human community because
another part of that community determines they are a threat, our faith and
tradition demand that we speak against and act for.
The Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of the
Incarnate Word stands alongside voices of our own faith tradition, and others,
who have issued statements against recent extreme actions by the Executive
Branch of the United States government which in some cases is a violation of
the US Immigration and Nationality Act.
Earlier this year, Pope Francis spoke out against
proposed bans on immigrants and refugees, saying “all nations must focus on
service to the poorest, the sick (and) those who have abandoned their homelands
in search of a better future for themselves and their families. If I say I am
Christian, but don’t do these things, I’m a hypocrite.” The Leadership Conference of Women Religious,
of which we are a member said, “We vow to continue to welcome refugees and
minister to immigrants” (statement issued January 30, 2017).
We are a congregation founded by immigrants, for
immigrants. Their faith and fortitude
made this country a refuge for freedom. We stand for and with our brothers and
sisters who still have the trust and courage to leave all that they know and love
to build a better life for themselves and others.
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January 30, 2017
Original: http://bit.do/dwV66
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January 30, 2017
Original: http://bit.do/dwV66
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