Welcoming The Stranger
by Jeff Carr
When was the last time you heard a Catholic cardinal calling his flock to civil
disobedience? That's what Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony did in his Lenten
message, urging his people to make room "for the stranger in our midst,
praying for the courage and strength to offer our spiritual and pastoral
ministry to all who come to us." The strangers to whom he was referring
are the estimated 11.5 to 12 million undocumented immigrants living on the
margins of our society.
The simmering immigration debate heated up this past week, as the Senate
Judiciary Committee began to discuss a bill by Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.)
to reform immigration laws and create a guest worker program. This comes on the
heels of a bill passed in December by the House (H.R. 4437) focusing primarily
on how to secure our borders from undocumented migrants, mostly from
He and many other religious leaders are particularly concerned about a
provision in H.R. 4437 (also in Specter's bill) that would impose sanctions on
anyone who assists undocumented immigrants in remaining in the
Prior to coming to Sojourners, I spent 17 years living and working a few miles
west of the cardinal's cathedral in one of the most impoverished neighborhoods
in
We certainly need humane immigration reform in this country, but a
mean-spirited criminalization approach that focuses only on border security is
not the answer. We can't realistically deport nearly 12 million people, and if
we somehow could, our economy would go into a tailspin. Most of the undocumented
people I knew were some of the most hardworking, family-oriented people in my
neighborhood. They came to this country for the same reasons people have come
here for during the past 400 years: economic, religious, and political freedom.
Many of them fled civil war in their countries or economic conditions so
desperate that risking everything to come to this country really wasn't a
choice. And most of the young people I worked with had come here at such a
young age they had no memories of their home country. They assimilated into our
community, learned to speak the language, and educated themselves; yet by no
choice of their own, they live in legal limbo.
One young woman I knew fled civil war in a Latin American country, arriving in
our community at age 5. She learned English, and, though she went to
underperforming local public schools, was a model student, worked hard,
graduated from high school with honors, and attended an Ivy League school. With
private scholarships, her own money, and the help of her parents, she graduated
with a degree in political science in three years. When she returned to our
community, her sole desire was to invest herself through her work in the lives
of other Latina-Latino young people who faced the same odds she did. Due to her
undocumented status, however, she is working in the underground economy earning
wages that barely make it possible to survive economically.
It is not realistic to think this young woman will return to her war torn
country just because we decide to make her a felon. There is nothing to return
to. She is smart, capable, and could be part of helping make our communities
stronger. And if thisbill passes, millions of people like her won't go home;
they will go further underground and become part of the permanent underclass in
our society. Instead of rewarding her for hard work, we will penalize her and
her family for wanting a better life. That's not
We should follow the outline for immigration reform developed by the U.S.
Catholic Conference of Bishops and other church organizations in their
"Justice for Immigrants" campaign:
More visas for family members of migrants to reduce what can be decades-long
waits to reunify;
A guest worker program with a path to permanent residency;
Better legal processes to guarantee immigrant rights;
Legalization of undocumented migrants;
Economic development in poor countries to reduce the need to migrate.
As a person of faith, I believe we should take seriously the writer of
Leviticus who says, "When a foreigner lives with you in your land, don't
take advantage of him. Treat the foreigner the same as a native. Love him like
one of your own. Remember that you were once foreigners in
I hope Mahony would have room to welcome an evangelical Christian minister such
as me to join him and his fellow priests in civil disobedience. It's time for
people of faith to stand up on behalf of our immigrant brothers and sisters
whom I am confident Jesus would have included when he said "I was a
stranger and you welcomed me."