At a recent Knights of Columbus event, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of
New York and other Church leaders warned against the tendency to
“discard” society's marginalized, including immigrants.
During the Knights' 131st convention in San Antonio, Texas, Cardinal
Dolan referred to Pope Francis' notion of the “globalization of
indifference,” saying this can be seen in how modern society has become a
“culture of throwing away.”
“We discard things, from the baby in the womb to our elders, to the
immigrant, to the refugee, to the sick, to the poor, to the unemployed,”
he told CNA on Aug. 6.
“It's a disposable culture,” he said, “and that's when we treat human life like trash, or like refuge.”
The cardinal reflected that the core problem of indifference is
addressed by one of the most basic doctrines of the Catholic faith – the
belief in the sanctity of human life and the integrity and dignity of
the human person.
In his homily for the opening Mass of the Knights' annual convention,
Texas Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller touched on the issue by mourning
the brokenness of the current immigration system in the United States.
He said that locals need to have greater solidarity with those who are
“obliged to flee their own country and exist between rootlessness and
integration.”
The archbishop quoted Pope Francis, warning of the dangers of the
globalization of indifference, particularly towards immigrants, whose
plight was like a “painful thorn in my heart.”
According to reports from the Holy See in 2012, there were roughly 16
million officially recognized refugees in the world and 28.8 million
internally displaced persons.
In addition, an estimated 21 million
people have been trafficked, including 4.5 million for sexual
exploitation and 14.2 million for what amounts to slave labor.
In his July 8 comments to the Italian island of Lampadusa – the gateway
for African emigrants, many of whom are Muslim – Pope Francis echoed the
words God spoke to Cain after he had killed his brother Abel, saying
“Where is your brother? His blood cries out to me.”
“This is not a question directed to others; it is a question directed to me, to you, to each of us,” the pontiff said.
“How many of us, myself included, have lost our bearings; we are no
longer attentive to the world in which we live; we don’t care; we don’t
protect what God created for everyone, and we end up unable even to care
for one another!”
He lamented that the “culture of comfort,” makes us think only of ourselves, and eventually results in indifference to others.
“Indeed, it even leads to the globalization of indifference. In this
globalized world, we have fallen into globalized indifference,” the Pope
said in his address last month. “We have become used to the suffering
of others: it doesn’t affect me; it doesn’t concern me; it’s none of my
business!”
Archbishop Garcia-Siller reiterated Pope Francis' remarks, telling CNA
on Aug. 7 that the “globalization of indifference makes us numb to the
reality of the other.”
What we need to foster, he encouraged, is “the globalization of love.”
He reflected that having a Pope from Latin America will “bring this
whole part of the world into the picture in a new way” so that many in
that hemisphere, both Catholics and non-Catholics, will be exposed to
the Catholic Faith and may consider to “love the Lord, and to serve
him.”
“He will bring new elements to the universal Church,” said the archbishop, that are “needed for the sake of the whole church.”
Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley of Boston also addressed the “globalization of
indifference” in an Aug. 7 address to the Knights, saying, “we must
overcome this indifference in our own lives and help people to see that
the Church’s teaching is about loving and caring for everyone.”