Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill Support Understanding for Migrants and Refugees

The Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill have joined with numerous faith-based organizations around the globe in signing a call for the world’s nations to consider the plight of migrants who have been forced to flee their homeland but have not been able to cross international borders to attain refugee status. The COVID-19 crisis has proven to intensify the struggles and perils these migrants face. June 20 has been chosen by the United Nations as the day to remember refugees worldwide, and it is an opportunity for the signatories to confirm what is expressed by Pope Francis in the 106th World Day of Migrants and Refugees, that the Catholic Church will commemorate on 27th September 2020. The faith-based organizations have provided for your review the brief document, “To know in order to understand.” We welcome you to reach out to us so that we can further explain the grave concerns for migrants and refugees who will be forgotten and abandoned in the COVID-19 crisis.
Faith-Based Organizations on World Refugee Day 2020
“To know in order to understand”
In his 2020 Message, Pope Francis invites all people of faith and goodwill to get to know migrants and refugees and, this year in particular, those who have been forced to flee but have been unable to cross an international border, the internally displaced persons (IDPs). Pope Francis encourages all of us to “know in order to understand” — personal knowledge is a necessary step towards appreciating the plight of others and making it our own. On World Refugee Day 2020, we wholeheartedly support the Pope’s invitation because the plight of IDPs is an often unseen tragedy that the global crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic has only exacerbated.
Today, there are more than 50.8 million internally displaced persons who have been forced to leave their homes because of conflict, violence or persecution. IDPs live in very difficult situations as they struggle to find safety within their home country or are unable to reach and then cross an international border to seek refugee status. Millions more are IDPs because of natural disasters. As humanitarian organizations and communities, we accompany, serve and involve IDPs around the world and call on policymakers and practitioners to listen to their needs and draw attention to their struggles.
In this time of COVID-19, we have seen this already radically vulnerable group running increased protection risks from their own governments. The profound social and financial crisis brought about by the pandemic could result in the concerns of IDPs receding further into the background. Some of our organizations are advocating for enhanced legal protection, non-discriminatory access to services, respect for their dignity and the enactment of peace building and reconciliation programs for IDPs. By engaging with the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of IDPs and the Global Protection Cluster, which have taken the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the landmark Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, and the UN Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Internal Displacement, we call for renewed attention to the plight of IDPs around the world. “It is important that internally displaced persons not be abandoned in this crisis. I call on States to exercise their sovereign responsibility to protect them based on the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement and without diverting from existing delivery of humanitarian assistance”, says Cecilia Jimenez-Damary, UN Rapporteur on the human rights of IDPs.
Displacement is about real people, and we must always remember that Jesus was once a displaced person. It is likely that most of us have displacement of some kind in our own family histories. If we engage with present day forcibly displaced persons in our midst, we will know more about the urgency of their predicament. Opening our eyes and mind will lead to a clearer idea of what we need to do to help them.
COVID-19 has stirred us to reflect on the displacement in our own hearts and on the flaws in our economic and political systems. Greed can so easily displace compassion. Deep in our hearts we know that care for others – not exploitation of them – makes us truly human. Mantras like “me and my country first” lack depth and are the products of misguided thinking.
In these uncertain times, Pope Francis exhorts us to be close in order to serve. On World Refugee Day 2020, we call for transformation. We call for eyes and hearts to open to action by recognizing, contemplating, and sharing the life of refugees, IDPs, and migrants. Through them we can see more clearly the truth about ourselves, our societies, and the direction we must follow. We therefore unite our voices with Pope Francis in his 2020 Message: “It is not about statistics, it is about real people! If we encounter them, we will get to know more about them. And knowing their stories, we will be able to understand them.”
More information is available at http://www.migrants-refugees.org/
Questions and comments can be directed to: 724-836-0406, ext. 6613
Signatories:
- Alboan
- Amala Annai Capuchin Province, Northern Tamil Nadu, India
- Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, Siem Reap, Cambodia
- Claretian Missionaries
- Congregation de Notre Dame of Montreal
- Congregations of St. Joseph
- Dominicans for Justice and Peace
- Dominican Leadership Conference
- EcoJesuit
- Entreculturas
- Federazione Organismi Cristiani Servizio Internazionale Volontario (FOCSIV)
- Fondazione Italiana di Solidarietà Marista Champagnat
- Fondazione Proclade Internazionale-Onlus (Claretian Presence at the UN)
- Fondazione Marista per la Solidarietà Internazionale (FMSI)
- Global Ignatian Advocacy Network for the Right to Education (GIAN Education)
- Global Ignatian Advocacy Network on Migration (GIAN Migration)
- Instituto Universitario de Estudios sobre Migraciones (IUEM), Universidad Pontificia Comillas
- Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary – Loreto Generalate
- International Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC)
- International Presentation Association
- International Union of Superiors General (UISG)
- Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS)
- Justice Coalition of Religious
- Justice Peace Integrity of Creation (JPIC)
- Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers
- Maryknoll Sisters of St. Dominic
- Medical Mission Sisters
- Mercy International Association: Mercy Global Action
- People’s Watch – India
- Red Jesuita con Migrantes de Latinoamérica y el Caribe (RJM/LAC)
- Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary
- Salesian Missions Inc.
- Salvatorian Office for International Aid (SOFIA)
- Scalabrini Missionaries
- School Sisters of Notre Dame
- Service of Documentation & Study on Global Mission (SEDOS)
- Scalabrini International Migration Network (SIMN)
- Sisters of Charity Federation
- Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill Generalate
- Sisters of Charity US Province
- Sisters of Charity of Nazareth Western Province Leadership
- Sisters of Charity of Nazareth Congregational Leadership
- Sisters of Mercy Brisbane, Australia
- Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur
- Social Justice and Ecology Secretariat, Society of Jesus
- Society of the Sacred Heart
- Solidaridad y Misión de los Misioneros Claretianos de América (SOMI-MICLA).
- Tamil Nadu Catholic Religious India (TNCRI)
- THALIR – Casey Capuchin Holistic Welfare Centre, India
- The Company of the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul
- Unanima International
- Union of Superiors General (USG)
- VIVAT International
- World Faiths Development Dialogue
- Youth Action for Transformation (YATRA)