In his Message for this World Day of Migrants
and Refugees, Pope Francis has warned:
The most economically advanced societies are witnessing a growing trend towards extreme individualism which, combined with a utilitarian mentality and reinforced by the media, is producing a “globalization of indifference”. In this scenario, migrants, refugees, displaced persons and victims of trafficking have become emblems of exclusion. In addition to the hardships that their condition entails, they are often looked down upon and considered the source of all society’s ills. That attitude is an alarm bell warning of the moral decline we will face if we continue to give ground to the throw-away culture. In fact, if it continues, anyone who does not fall within the accepted norms of physical, mental and social well-being is at risk of marginalization and exclusion.
The most economically advanced societies are witnessing a growing trend towards extreme individualism which, combined with a utilitarian mentality and reinforced by the media, is producing a “globalization of indifference”. In this scenario, migrants, refugees, displaced persons and victims of trafficking have become emblems of exclusion. In addition to the hardships that their condition entails, they are often looked down upon and considered the source of all society’s ills. That attitude is an alarm bell warning of the moral decline we will face if we continue to give ground to the throw-away culture. In fact, if it continues, anyone who does not fall within the accepted norms of physical, mental and social well-being is at risk of marginalization and exclusion.
For this reason, the presence of migrants and refugees –
and of vulnerable people in general – is an invitation to recover some of those
essential dimensions of our Christian existence and our humanity that risk
being overlooked in a prosperous society. That is why it is not just about
migrants. When we show concern for them, we also show concern for ourselves,
for everyone; in taking care of them, we all grow; in listening to them, we
also give voice to a part of ourselves that we may keep hidden because it is
not well regarded nowadays. ...
Dear brothers and sisters, our response to the challenges posed by
contemporary migration can be summed up in four verbs: welcome, protect,
promote and integrate. Yet these verbs do not apply only to migrants and
refugees. They describe the Church’s mission to all those living in the
existential peripheries, who need to be welcomed, protected, promoted and
integrated. If we put those four verbs into practice, we will help build the
city of God and man. We will promote the integral human development of all
people. We will also help the world community to come closer to the goals of
sustainable development that it has set for itself and that, lacking such an
approach, will prove difficult to achieve.
In
a word, it is not only the cause of migrants that is at stake; it is not just
about them, but about all of us, and about the present and future of the human
family. Migrants, especially those who are most vulnerable, help us to read the
“signs of the times”. Through them, the Lord is calling us to conversion, to be
set free from exclusivity, indifference and the throw-away culture. Through
them, the Lord invites us to embrace fully our Christian life and to
contribute, each according to his or her proper vocation, to the building up of
a world that is more and more in accord with God’s plan.
No comments:
Post a Comment