Giving priority to Christian refugees for settlement programs would
be “a trap” that discriminates and fuels religious tensions in the
Middle East, said Iraq’s Chaldean Catholic patriarch.
“Every reception policy that discriminates (between) the persecuted
and suffering on religious grounds ultimately harms the Christians of
the East” and would be “a trap for Christians in the Middle East,” said
Patriarch Louis Sako of Baghdad.
The patriarch, speaking to Fides, the news agency of the Congregation
for the Evangelization of Peoples, commented on an executive action by
U.S. President Donald Trump that temporarily stops from U.S. entry
refugees from all over the world and migrants from seven countries in an
attempt to review the screening process.
The document asks that once
the ban is lifted, refugee claims based on religious persecution be
prioritized.
Patriarch Sako said any preferential treatment based on religion
provides the kind of arguments used by those who propagate “propaganda
and prejudice that attack native Christian communities of the Middle
East as ‘foreign bodies'” or as groups that are “supported and defended
by Western powers.”
“These discriminating choices,” he said, “create and feed tensions
with our Muslim fellow citizens. Those who seek help do not need to be
divided according to religious labels. And we do not want privileges.
This is what the Gospel teaches, and what was pointed out by Pope
Francis, who welcomed refugees in Rome who fled from the Middle East,
both Christians and Muslims without distinction.”
Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila, Philippines, president of
Caritas Internationalis, said any policy that gave priorities to
Christians “might revive some of these animosities and might even pit
Christians against Muslims, and that (also) might generate contrary
action from the Muslims against Christians.”
“This is a time when we don’t want to add to the prejudice, the
biases and even discriminatory attitudes evolving in the world,” he told
Catholic News Service in Beirut Jan. 30 at the Caritas Lebanon
headquarters.
Emphasizing that he had not read the text of the executive action,
but only news reports, the Philippine cardinal said announcing a ban
being applied to specific countries was akin to “labeling them — and the
migrants coming from those countries — as possible threats to a
country. I think it is quite a generalization that needs to be
justified.”
Cardinal Tagle, who has visited refugee settlements as part of his
role as Caritas president, said he asks people who express reservations
about receiving refugees and migrants, “Have you ever talked to a real
refugee? Have you heard stories of real persons?”
“Very often, the refugee issue is reduced to statistics and an
abstraction,” he said, and when people actually talk with refugees, “you
realize that there is a human story, a global story (there) and if you
just open your ears, your eyes, your heart then you could say, ‘This
could be my mother. This could be my father. This could be my brother,
my child.’
“These are human lives,” he said. “So, for people making decisions on
the global level, please know that whatever you decide touches persons
for better or for worse. And if our decisions are not based on the
respect for human dignity and for what is good, then we will just be
prolonging this problem — creating conflicts that drive people away.”
Canadian Jesuit Father Michael Czerny, undersecretary for migrants
and refugees at the Vatican’s new Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development, told CNS in Rome that Christians are asked to reflect on
the Good Samaritan and not to “react and act as if the plight of
migrants and refugees is none of our business.”
People should focus on those seeking security and “take the trouble
to find out the facts” — like how “migrants, far from being a drain,
make a net contribution to the domestic economy — rather (than) swallow
allegations which just trigger fear.”
Richer countries should not only welcome those who are fleeing, they
“can do much more to help improve security and living, working,
education and health opportunities in the refugee- and migrant-producing
countries,” he said in a written statement.
More effort should be put into peacemaking and more resources dedicated to “helpful foreign aid.”
“The role of government is to enact its people’s values, keeping
different factors in balance. National security is important, but always
in balance with human security, which includes values like openness,
solidarity, hope for the future,” the Jesuit priest said.
“The bottom line,” he said “is the centrality and dignity of the
human person, where you cannot favor ‘us’ and ‘them,’ citizens over
others.”