All of this area is preparing for a visit from Pope Francis to
Juarez, Mexico on February 17. Training
is happening for becoming part of the contingent of 80,000 people who will form
a 25-mile-long chain to help protect the Pope during his visit. Plans are being made for school, business
and road closings. The front page of the
paper has had articles every day about the preparations.
It is predicted that the Pope will include in his visit a
symbolic gesture such as a visit to the border fence that separates the United
States and Mexico. I wrote about this
fence in the last blog. In a Commentary
in the El Paso Times today, Ouisa D.
Davis, an attorney at law in El Paso, speaks of the implications of this visit
for this area and the entire country:
“It is right that he should come to
Juárez, the Ellis Island of the southern U.S. border. It is through our region that families are
reunited despite our broken immigration system.
It is through the desert Southwest that thousands of men, women and
children have sacrificed their lives along the journey.
It is right that he comes at this
moment, when U.S. political and social discourse is filled with hate and
disrespect for immigrants and refugees to remind us that humanity is one,
united by our common God, no matter our form of worship.”
As this entire region prepares for this visit and its
significance, we at Loretto/Nazareth are experiencing changes in the flow of
immigrants. Yesterday we welcomed only
four new people. The day before there
were 10. The second shelter that was
opened at St. Ignatius when we had 80 – 100 people coming every day has been
closed for a few weeks. Each day we wait to see how many refugees will cross
our threshold and from what countries they will come. In addition to El Salvador, Guatemala and
Brazil, we have had people from Nigeria, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Pakistan. Some
of them have been Muslims and we have had to prepare different food to meet
their dietary needs.
No one is clear about why the ebb and flow of immigrants
varies so much. Is it the changes that
are happening in U.S. policy? Is it the
weather? Is it what the smugglers are
saying to them about the right time to travel?
All we can do is stand ready to provide them with the warmth and
welcome, safety and security, food and beverage which they have not always
experienced in the detention centers where they were held before they come to
us.
Thank goodness for the generosity of the people of this
region who are so faithful in bringing food and clothing as well as offering their
time to volunteer in any way they can.
Thank goodness for your generosity in supporting this effort. May the Pope’s visit remind us, in the words
of Ouisa D. Davis, that we cannot be a nation that “suffers from a culture of
indifference which allows us to look the other way and live in bubbles of
ignorance as we encourage the culture of death to invade our land and social
structure.” Rather, we are a region, and I might say a
nation, “desperately in need of reminders of how to live lives of mercy and
compassion.” May the Pope’s visit be a blessing to this region and its people
as well as to our whole country.
Pope Francis coming to Juárez, Mexico |
Sister Elaine and our Pope Francis! |
The whole community with Pope Francis! |