MSNBC
By Amanda Sakuma
September 23, 2015
Arguably
one of the most prominent, immigrant-friendly leaders in the world is
set to capture the entire American public’s attention this week, helping
the Catholic Church
cling onto one of its fastest growing groups, but hardest to retain:
Latinos.
Pope
Francis’ visit to the U.S. marks a set of historic firsts and a golden
opportunity to appeal to the record 55 million Hispanics that currently
live in this country.
He’s
the first Latin American to lead the church and it’s his first visit to
the U.S. When he appears before thousands of Latinos in his first Mass
on Wednesday, he will
be speaking in the same native tongue. In New York he will meet with an
immigrant youth soccer league and stand at an alter built by migrant
day laborers. From there Francis will address immigration and religious
liberty in Philadelphia on the steps of Independence
Hall.
It’s
a jam-packed schedule reaching a population often left unnoticed in the
shadows. His defense of human dignity extends to all walks of life,
calling for migrants and
refugees in the U.S. and around the world to be “welcomed and
protected,” not demonized.
But
the pope’s visit also provides a prominent platform for religious
groups that have attempted to lead on immigration as a moral authority
to drive domestic policy.
It’s a sharp contrast to the tenor and tone on immigration issues
currently dominating the political debate.
“His
purpose here is not to wade into our domestic politics but to strike a
different tone, to change hearts,” said Kevin Appleby, director of
migration and refugee policy
at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. “It’s the answer to the
negativity and the angry rhetoric that we’re seeing both on Capitol Hill
and in the campaigns.”
Church
leaders credit Francis for “walking the walk” in being willing to
follow through on his calls for immigrant rights. For a time there was a
chance the pope would
take that on in a literal sense, when he said that traveling to the
U.S.-Mexico border would be a “beautiful gesture of brotherhood and
support.”
While
that trip ultimately did not happen, Fr. Sean Carroll, executive
director of the KINO Border Initiative with the Jesuit Conference, said
Pope Francis’ message was
emblematic of the support he has shown in urging humanitarian aid to
all migrants and refugees in need.
“We
still hope he will make the border visit someday,” Carroll said. “Just
the fact of him crossing the border would really highlight the trauma
that the migrants experience.”
In
some senses the target audience for Francis’ trip is quite natural –
Latinos in many ways are the future of American Catholicism. According
to the Pew Research Center,
Latinos represent 34% of all adults aligned with the church in the U.S.
The share of Hispanics practicing the faith has grown steadily over the
last several years, even as the proportion of white Catholics has
waned.
But
there’s a unique dynamic that is currently playing out in Latino
communities. While the face of the Catholic church is becoming
increasingly more diverse – reflecting
in part the high birth rates and growing Hispanic population in the
U.S. – the Hispanic community is becoming less and less Catholic. It has
been a slow and steady decline of religious affiliation over the last
several years. In fact, Pew found in 2014 that
nearly one-in-four Hispanic adults, or 24%, identified themselves as
“former” Catholics.
Mark
Gray, senior research associate at the Center for Applied Research in
the Apostolate at Georgetown University, said there’s a fairly even
split behind the decline.
Those Latinos immigrants who aren’t leaving religion entirely are
instead shifting their affiliations as they plant firm roots in the U.S.
“People
are coming from countries where there is really only one faith –
everyone is Catholic. But here, there are more options, there’s greater
variety,” Gray said. “It’s
often not the first generation to make that choice. Often it’s those
children who marry non-Catholic and end up in an evangelical church.”
Some
hope that Pope Francis’ unique appeal and more inclusive stance on
social issues will reinvigorate Catholics and keep the church growing.
In addition to his remarks
on immigration, Francis has weighed into addressing controversial
issues from marriage, poverty, climate change and global capitalism,
shifting the church’s tone in ways that leave more openings to reach
Americans.
Andrea
Cristina Mercado, co-chair of the immigrant rights group We Belong
Together, said she feels more connected to her faith. She is now anxious
to introduce her young
daughter to religion and become more involved with the church.
“I
was raised Catholic, but stopped practicing for many years,” Mercado
said. “Pope Francis really inspired me – he’s brought me back to the
church.”
Mercado
was one of 100 women who walked a 100-mile pilgrimage – starting from
an immigration detention center in Pennsylvania and ending in
Washington, D.C. – to pay tribute
to Francis’ historic visit to the U.S. this week. Advocates and
organizers joined the procession from across the country, calling on
supporters to echo the pope’s message promoting dignity for immigrants.
Ana
Cañenguez, an undocumented mother living in Utah, brought with her the
shoes that she wore while crossing the desert at the U.S.-Mexico border.
It was her third time
making the journey – each time was to unite more of her family from El
Salvador. But now Cañenguez and her children have final orders of
deportation on their names. She hopes the papal visit will give rise to
other stories like hers.
“I
put these shoes on because when we were in the desert, I ran with faith
and hope. And I’m doing this same pilgrimage of faith and hope,”
Cañenguez said.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment