bishopolmstedletter

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 Somos America / We Are America Coalition July 28, 2008 Most Reverend Thomas J Olmsted Diocese of Phoenix 400 East Monroe Street Phoenix, Arizona 85004-2336 Dear Bishop Olmsted: Your Excellency, I am contacting you as the elected leader of Somos América/We Are America, a broad coalition of community organizations that focus on immigrant, civil, and human rights. Members of the S omos América coalition have asked m e to represent them in contacting you regarding the human and civil rights crisis that has been escalating specifically in Maricopa County, and, more broadly, the territory covered by the Diocese of Phoenix. Many of the coalition’s members adhere to a Catholic faith life, and are deeply appreciative of the materials that you have published in the past, such as “Catholics in the Public Square,” the Pastoral Letter on Migration that you co-signed with the other Arizona Bishops, and more recently, the USCCB effort on Faithful Citizenship. They appreciate your words in the Catholic Sun: Conversely, immigration laws badly in need of reform are used today as an excuse not to welcome the stranger, even to refuse humanitarian assistance to women and children. It is true that a nation has the right to enact laws that regulate immigration but those laws are always subject to the greater laws of God. They must be just and must preserve the dignity of each human person. Furthermore, there are certain natural rights of the human person that must be protected and which no man-made law may usurp. Bishop Olmsted, these words are deeply meaningful to people who live their lives as Catholics, and more broadly to people who live their faith traditions holding human dignity as core to their beliefs. Yet, most people of faith have felt let down and abandoned by their high-ranking religious leaders when the words do not specifically address the local lived experiences that church-going families have here in Maricopa County. PO Box 1 5363 • S cottsdale, AZ 85267

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Page 1: BishopOlmstedLetter

 

 

Somos America / We Are America Coalition

July 28, 2008

Most Reverend Thomas J Olmsted

Diocese of Phoenix

400 East Monroe Street

Phoenix, Arizona 85004-2336

Dear Bishop Olmsted:

Your Excellency, I am contacting you as the elected leader of Somos América/We AreAmerica, a broad coalition of community organizations that focus on immigrant, civil,

and human rights. Members of the Somos América coalition have asked me to represent

them in contacting you regarding the human and civil rights crisis that has beenescalating specifically in Maricopa County, and, more broadly, the territory covered by

the Diocese of Phoenix.

Many of the coalition’s members adhere to a Catholic faith life, and are deeply

appreciative of the materials that you have published in the past, such as “Catholics in thePublic Square,” the Pastoral Letter on Migration that you co-signed with the other

Arizona Bishops, and more recently, the USCCB effort on Faithful Citizenship. They

appreciate your words in the Catholic Sun:

Conversely, immigration laws badly in need of reform are used today as an

excuse not to welcome the stranger, even to refuse humanitarian assistance to

women and children. It is true that a nation has the right to enact laws thatregulate immigration but those laws are always subject to the greater laws of God.

They must be just and must preserve the dignity of each human person.

Furthermore, there are certain natural rights of the human person that must be

protected and which no man-made law may usurp.

Bishop Olmsted, these words are deeply meaningful to people who live their lives as

Catholics, and more broadly to people who live their faith traditions holding human

dignity as core to their beliefs. Yet, most people of faith have felt let down andabandoned by their high-ranking religious leaders when the words do not specifically

address the local lived experiences that church-going families have here in Maricopa

County.

PO Box 15363 • Scottsdale, AZ 85267

Page 2: BishopOlmstedLetter

 

 

Members of our coalition ask: What is dignified about children being held at gunpoint by

Sheriff’s Deputies? What is dignified about families being rent in the name of Law

Enforcement when felons not only roam the streets but exploit with impunity decent,

hard-working people of faith? What is dignified about living a life of fear to the level of being unable to go to the store or to school without fear of never seeing some of your

loved ones again? What is dignified about a legal permanent resident of the United

States being told by hospital personnel that he will be sent to Mexico unless the familyagrees to disconnect him from life support because he has no health insurance? Your

Excellency, these are daily occurrences in the lives of people of Hispanic descent in thisDiocese, and they only touch the surface of examples of the current assault on Human

Dignity that are excused as basic law enforcement and being “tough on crime.” Your

people are suffering, Bishop, and according to the writings in “Welcoming the Stranger

in America”, the People of Faith who follow you are called to respond:

“Some of them came with proper papers, others did not. Whatever the case, theChurch has always felt obliged to extend a warm welcome and helping hand….

We cannot forget Jesus’ words (Mt 25:35), “I was a stranger and you welcomed

me.”

“John Paul II spells out the kind of attitude we should have towards these recent

arrivals (Ibid.), “ Migrants should be met with a hospitable and welcoming

attitude, which can encourage them to become part of the Church’s life, always

with due regard for their freedom and their specific cultural identity.”

“What we are dealing with here is more than a matter of justice, even though it

certainly is that. It is also a matter of love. No man-made law, [emphasis added]

no circumstance, no custom can excuse us from the obligation to love ourneighbor, whether the neighbor is a Samaritan or a Hispanic, whether he speaks

our language or not. The demands of Christ’s call to love our neighbor are great

indeed.”

So much of your booklet “Catholics in the Public Square” talks about how people of 

Catholic faith are called to live a different life – even public life – than the status quo.

Yet, some of the most prominent voices in public life claim membership in a CatholicChurch and act directly against the teachings of the Catholic Church. Please, Bishop,

your voice is needed to call this behavior out and decry it. Your faithful are hurting in

the wake of such hypocrisy: they are afraid to go to Church; they are afraid to go to

work; they are afraid to seek medical care for their family members; they are afraid totake their children to school. Your voice is needed in our midst, not only to comfort the

afflicted, but to afflict the comfortable.

PO Box 15363 • Scottsdale, AZ 85267

Page 3: BishopOlmstedLetter

 

 

We, as a coalition, live with and respond every day to our neighbors who suffer, making

every effort to ease their pain. We invite you to join us in a meeting with some of the

most devastated families in the Valley. Perhaps by gathering with them face to face and

hearing their stories, we could hear your pastoral leadership in response.

Most Respectfully,

Héctor Yturralde, President

Somos América /We Are America Coalition

602-370-4729

PO Box 15363 • Scottsdale, AZ 85267