Archbishop José H. Gomez of Los Angeles applauded a new California
law that will allow undocumented migrants to receive state driver’s
licenses, while calling for greater federal reform.
“Driving is one of the basic necessities of life. So this new law is
going to make a big difference for millions of people in their everyday
lives,” Archbishop Gomez told participants of an Oct. 3 rally at Los
Angeles City Hall.
“It will make it easier for them to get to work, to go to school, to go
the store, to get to church. This bill will make our families, our
communities and our economy stronger.”
California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill on Oct. 3 to allow permits for
California residents who are in the country illegally, after they pass a
driving test.
The legislation was praised as a landmark bill that could spark further
reform across the country and make the roads of California safer. It is
estimated that more than one million people may be able to gain licenses
under the new law.
However, Archbishop Gomez noted, the legislation is “still only a
half-measure” because the U.S. immigration system is “totally broken”
and can only be fixed by “real and comprehensive” reform at the national
level.
“We need immigration reform that keeps families together, that gives
rights to workers, and that provides a generous path to citizenship,” he
said, adding that comprehensive immigration reform would help
immigrants join in the American promise and “live with the dignity that
God intends for them.”
In a Sept. 30 letter to members of Congress, Archbishop Gomez joined
other leaders of the U.S. bishops’ conference in urging that the
government shutdown be quickly resolved so that Congress can “continue
the essential task of immigration reform.”
Other bishops throughout the country have also spoken up on the need for
reform, stressing the gravity of the issue for the nation as a whole.
“Our current immigration laws do not do enough to respect and protect
the God-given dignity all of us have received, and they no longer
correspond to the modern realities of globalized economies,” Archbishop
Samuel J. Aquila of Denver and Bishop Michael J. Sheridan of Colorado
Springs said in an Oct. 1 pastoral letter to Catholics in the state of
Colorado.
Entitled “Immigration and Our Nation's Future,” the letter established
that the human person must be the central concern in any consideration
about immigration policy.
The bishops offered a framework build on Catholic social teaching, but
declined to endorse any particular policy or party. Rather, they focused
on the need to see immigrants, regardless of their legal status, as
neighbors and to welcome them in Jesus' name.
They emphasized the importance of “both justice and mercy” in addressing the issue of immigration.
“Every American has a duty to help bring about reform in this arena,
keeping in mind Jesus’ exhortation to help the poor, the hungry, the
stranger and the imprisoned,” they said, warning against attempts to
over simply the situation into an “us vs. them” scenario.
“We can narrowly brand undocumented immigrants as ‘lawbreakers’ or
‘illegals,’ and demand that the full weight of the law be used to keep
them out,” the bishops said. “But if we approach this issue with a
Catholic worldview, that is, if we think with the Church and try to see
immigrants through the eyes of Christ, then a shift should occur in our
minds and hearts.”
Countries have a duty to treat immigrants “as people in whom the face of
Christ can be seen,” Archbishop Aquila and Bishop Sheridan said.
Christian responses to immigrants must feature “hospitality” and reject
“xenophobia and racism.”
The bishops acknowledged a legitimate right to national borders, as well
as the need to respect local laws. At the same time, they said,
migration in order to find better conditions for one’s family is a
right, and refugees and asylum seekers should be given protection.
They stressed the dignity of the migrating human person and the
importance of the common good in addressing the complex matter of
immigration policy.