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Created in
God’s Image
by Bishop Victor Galeone
“I
quit!” The fact that the parish maintenance man quit without giving
me two weeks notice had me upset. Until I could hire someone else, I
needed a short-term replacement. So I called Mr. Troy, who operated
the cleaning firm contracted by our parish school. Most of the
workers on his night-shift operation were Hispanic. He agreed to let
me have Lucho from Monday to Friday for $12 an hour. He would bill
the parish 40 hours each week and, in turn, would pay Lucho. Since
Lucho spoke next to no English, I had to instruct him in Spanish
about his daily duties.
It was well into the second week when I noticed Lucho’s wedding
band. “Lucho, I see that you’re married. Do you have any children?”
“Sí, Padre. Three. They’re down in El Salvador with my wife.”
“Do you get back to see them often?”
“No, I haven’t seen them since I came to America six years ago.”
“Six years! And why not?”
“I have no green card. If I leave the U.S. to visit them, I won’t be
allowed back in. And then we’d have real problems with no money to
support them.”
“How do you keep in touch?”
“Every first and third Saturday, at exactly 1:00 p.m., my wife and
kids go to the post office, where there’s the only phone in town.
That’s when I call, and we spend about half an hour on the phone.”
“Lucho, may I ask how much Mr. Troy is paying you for the parish
work you’re doing?”
“Seven dollars an hour.”
If anyone is wondering why I did not confront Mr. Troy for
shortchanging Lucho of a good portion of his wages, the reason is
that he might have reported Lucho to the immigration authorities for
deportation.
My purpose in recounting this episode is to put a face on the
so-called illegal immigrant. I am the son of immigrants myself.
True, they were legal. With a work permit, my father came to the
United States in 1922, leaving my mother behind with the baby. Since
he wasn’t a U.S. citizen yet, he could not bring her along. Back
then the immigration quota was quite stringent for “Southern
Europeans.” Mother followed in June of 1928.
Against this backdrop, I would like to challenge all of us with the
church’s teaching vis-à-vis the immigration challenge. I want to
limit myself to some poignant reflections from my brother bishop,
Thomas Wenski of Orlando, the former chairman of the Bishops’
Committee on Migration. Bishop Wenski:
“We have a right and a duty to defend our borders and our security;
but we are not a freer people when millions of our neighbors live in
fear of a ‘knock on the door’ in the middle of the night. Spending
so many resources chasing bricklayers, housekeepers, and waiters who
are merely seeking a better life for their families – and whose
labor we need – should no longer be an acceptable application of our
security resources in a post 9/11 world. There are after all real
criminals, drug dealers and terrorists to apprehend.” (Letter to
Sen. Bill Nelson, 3/15/06)
“Some of those who today most harshly criticize the engagement of
bishops on issues of public policy – whether on life issues, like
abortion or stem-cell research, or on peace and justice issues, like
the conduct of war or trade policy – forget that the great civil
rights movement of the 1960s was in its inspiration and leadership a
religious movement. Dr. King was a Baptist preacher – and those who
swelled the ranks of marchers that faced down fire hoses and police
dogs, were for the most part church people. To those who told him to
stay in the pulpit… Martin Luther King said: ‘The church is not the
master of the state, nor is the church its servant; the church is to
be its conscience.’ Martin Luther King and those who linked arms
with him touched the conscience of a nation and helped to bring an
end to the legally sanctioned underclass made possible by unjust Jim
Crow laws.
“We engage the immigration issue with the goal of touching the
conscience of the nation and its leaders. Our proposal is about
fashioning an immigration system that facilitates legal status and
family unity in the interest of serving God-given dignity and the
rights of every individual.” (Migration Mass, 1/15/06)
“The church’s work in assisting migrants stems from the belief that
every person is created in God’s image. In the Old Testament, God
calls upon his people to care for the alien because ‘…you were once
aliens yourselves in the land of Egypt.’ (Dt. 10:17-19) In the New
Testament…Jesus himself was a refugee fleeing the terror of Herod.
(Mt. 2:15)… Jesus identified himself with newcomers and with other
marginalized persons in a special way: ‘I was a stranger and you
welcomed me.’ (Mt. 25:35)” (Testimony before the House Subcommittee
on Immigration, 5/22/07) |