Catholics
Essay Preview: Catholics
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my report is on current events in the catholic community. From Los Angeles to St. Louis, and from Jackson, Miss., to Washington, D.C., hundreds of thousands of people nationwide put on white shirts and picked up American flags to join rallies, marches and prayer services April 9 and 10 to call attention to the contributions of immigrants and to ask for changes in immigration law and policies.
WOMAN HOLDS FLAG DURING VIGIL – Maritza Monterrosa of Martinez, Calif., holds a flag as hundreds of people gather April 10 for an interfaith candlelight vigil for immigrant rights. The march started at St. Peter Martyr Parish in Pittsburg, Calif., and was sponsored by the Contra Costa Interfaith Supporting Community Organization. The theme was “No somos criminales, somos los hijos de Dios” (“We are not criminals, we are children of God”). (CNS)
In several cities, Catholic bishops gave speeches and led prayers. Many participants were encouraged to join the activities at their churches.
Crowds estimated to be as large as 500,000 in Dallas April 9 and in Washington April 10 blocked city streets and surprised even organizers with their size.
The events were part of the National Day of Action for Immigrant Justice, aimed at opposing strict immigration enforcement legislation passed by the House in December and encouraging more comprehensive bills that would not criminalize illegal immigrants and those who provide services to them. Organizers also support legislation that would make it possible for the estimated 11 million to 12 million illegal immigrants to legalize their status.
At an April 10 vigil at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in downtown Los Angeles, Cardinal Roger M. Mahony prayed in Spanish to “the God of one and all” to help members of Congress not be exclusionary, and he asked for the intercession of Mary, an immigrant who fled to Egypt with her son, Jesus.
In St. Louis the day before, Archbishop Raymond L. Burke said, “It is not right to make immigrants the scapegoats of social and political problems of our nation. It is profoundly unjust to place the blame for the acts of terrorism perpetrated by a few at the door of all immigrants.”
On a stage where he was joined by Protestant, Jewish and Muslim leaders, he said: “Our presence here today expresses the teaching common to our different religious traditions which instructs us to receive immigrants as true brothers and sisters.”
In Chicago about 400 people gathered to pray for immigration reform April 10 at Our Lady of Tepeyac Church, days after senators left Washington for a two-week recess without voting on a comprehensive immigration bill worked out in a bipartisan compromise.
The congregation prayed the Stations of the Cross, with each station focused on one aspect of immigrant life, from the lack of access to health care to unscrupulous employers stripping undocumented workers of their dignity. At the last station, “Jesus is laid in the tomb,” Our Lady of Tepeyac pastor Father Robert Casey said that for immigration reform advocates it is a “time of watchful waiting of waiting inside the tomb.”
In downtown Des Moines, Iowa, April 9, Lorena Perez, of St. Mary Parish in Ottumwa, Iowa, was with a group from her town who took a bus to the rally. She held an American flag with a palm frond woven into the shape of a cross on the stem of the flag. She said she was there “in support of dignity and just reform.”
Eman Garcia, of Indianola and a member of Our Lady of the Americas Parish in Des Moines, said he wore his 2004 high school graduation cap to correct the perception that all Hispanic youths drop out of high school. “They get us all wrong,” he said. “Were here for something positive. We can do this.”
Elizabeth Ayala of Morton, Miss., brought her 8-year-old daughter, Anie, with her to a rally in Jackson, Miss., where hundreds of people met April 10 near the steps of the Mississippi Capitol. Many displayed the American flag and signs and chanted “Yes, we can do it!”
A native of Colombia, Ayala said Latinos are in the United States working and should be able to stay and to become citizens.
“We need our rights, we are good people who came here to work,” Ayala said. “We support America, we support our families, and we want to stay.”
In Colorado Springs, Colo., more than 500 people participated in a lunchtime immigration rally April 10.
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