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Cardinal
Roger Mahony |
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Putting a
human face on the immigrant |
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The Posada of Mary
and Joseph becomes the keystone of Solidarity USA to seek support from America's
churches for Immigration Reform.
The premise: If
Mary and Joseph were here today seeking safety and a place to make their home,
they would be called undocumented migrants.
Now being drafted. |
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STANDING with the ELEVEN MILLION,
Welcoming the Strangers in Our Midst
Cardinal Roger Mahony is retiring as
the leader of L.A.'s Roman Catholic
diocese, but he will continue to
press for immigration reform.
LOS ANGELES &
SANTA FE, NM
(By
Tim Rutten, LAT)
January 19, 2011
When he turns 75 late next month,
Cardinal Roger Mahony will step down as
the leader of America's largest Roman
Catholic diocese.
But he's still vigorous and plans to
remain very much engaged, not only as a
priest but also as an influential voice
in the debates over an issue that has
preoccupied him throughout his ministry:
Immigration. In a statement to be
distributed throughout the archdiocese
this week, Mahony outlines his plans in
a deeply personal document headed,
"STANDING with the ELEVEN MILLION:
Welcoming the Strangers in Our Midst."
The title is a reference to the
estimated 11 million immigrants
currently making a life in the United
States without legal documents. And in a
conversation this week, I asked Mahony
the first native-born Angeleno to serve
as archbishop why this issue, among
all others, so animates him.
"If you go back to my earliest years as
a seminarian and as a priest," he said,
"these are the people to whom I've been
most devoted and of whom I've been most
admiring."
In his statement, Mahony amplifies
personal history, writing "while growing
up in the San Fernando Valley, I came in
contact with those Mexican American men
and women who worked for my parents at
their poultry processing plant.
They became my friends. During my years
as a seminarian at Saint John's Seminary
in Camarillo, several of us seminarians
were able to accompany priests to the
farm labor camps where Mass was offered
.... After my ordination to the
priesthood, I served in the San Joaquin
Valley and was always deeply touched by
the faith, traditions and commitment to
family on the part of countless
immigrants across the Valley .... The
efforts of Cesar Chavez to improve the
salaries and working conditions of
thousands of farm workers in our state
greatly inspired me."
With an academic background in social
work, Mahony who served as the first
head of California's Agricultural Labor
Relations Board always has had a
capacity, unusual among clerics, to
engage the practical details of applying
social morality to policy. Thus, he sees
an opening still for comprehensive
immigration reform, which he believes
has been impeded by the recession.
He intends, moreover, to devote a
substantial portion of his effort to
universities because, as he told me,
"Young people get this issue."
That, plus polling data that demonstrate
a continuing appetite for some sort of
path to legal residency and citizenship
for undocumented immigrant workers,
makes him optimistic on an issue many
would rather avoid.
I asked Mahony how he responds to
critics who charge the church's and
his position on immigration is less a
consequence of principle than of
expediency. Newcomers, after all, are
filling pews increasingly vacated by
alienated or indifferent Catholics of
European descent and helping to maintain
the church's position as the country's
largest religious denomination. The
cardinal chuckled and quipped, "If
that's the only way we can attract
people, we'd be doing such a poor job of
proclaiming the Gospel that we'd have
gone out of business years ago."
Then, as he always does, Mahony quickly
returned to the hard numbers he believes
support the immigrants' case and
vindicate the church's position on the
issue. "More than 40% of our 11 million
immigrant people came here with visas on
airplanes and simply stayed on when
their visas expired. Very few of those
immigrants are Hispanic or Catholic. We
have no system in this country for
tracking people with expired visas, and
we need to make more stringent tracking
of visa holders part of any
comprehensive immigration reform. And I
support that."
In his statement this week, Mahony
writes "I suspect many anti-immigrant
feelings and sentiments arise from
frustration with the seeming inability,
or the unwillingness, to fix our broken
immigration system," but he hopes to
"encourage all of us to get to know our
immigrant neighbors more personally. We
will discover their core values are the
same as ours .... Once we put a human
face on an immigrant, the stereotypes
begin to dissolve."
Immigration is one of those contested
social questions on which goodwill and
reason are in increasingly short supply.
The approach Mahony is now pursuing is
so self-evidently rooted in our common
moral wisdom and the practical realities
of our economy and politics that those
who refuse to engage the issue on this
basis bear the burden of showing why.