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By HOUSTON (CNS) -- Locallaw enforcement and local jurisdictions should not be required to enforce federalimmigration law, said Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston,president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.Local law enforcementofficials "work long hours to protect our communities" and efforts tocharge them with the responsibility of enforcing immigration law should beopposed, he said, because this "would fundamentally alter the relationshipour local law enforcement officials maintain with local communities, especiallyimmigrant communities."Local police can workwith federal law enforcement in dealing with "violent criminalaliens," Cardinal DiNardo said, but the "burden" of enforcingfederal immigration law would be "taking away from their efforts to ensurepublic safety" while they are "pursuing those who are otherwiselaw-abiding." He added, "It also makes immigrant communitiesreluctant to report crimes and to cooperate with the police."Cardinal DiNardo madehis r...

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HOUSTON (CNS) -- Local law enforcement and local jurisdictions should not be required to enforce federal immigration law, said Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Local law enforcement officials "work long hours to protect our communities" and efforts to charge them with the responsibility of enforcing immigration law should be opposed, he said, because this "would fundamentally alter the relationship our local law enforcement officials maintain with local communities, especially immigrant communities."

Local police can work with federal law enforcement in dealing with "violent criminal aliens," Cardinal DiNardo said, but the "burden" of enforcing federal immigration law would be "taking away from their efforts to ensure public safety" while they are "pursuing those who are otherwise law-abiding." He added, "It also makes immigrant communities reluctant to report crimes and to cooperate with the police."

Cardinal DiNardo made his remarks June 9 in the opening address of a conference in Houston, "Mobilizing Coherent Community Responses to Changing Immigration Policies."

The three-day event was hosted by the Center for Migration Studies of New York, the Cabrini Center for Immigrant Legal Assistance of Catholic Charities of Galveston-Houston, the Houston Immigration Legal Services Collaborative and the South Texas College of Law Houston.

Cardinal DiNardo noted the U.S. bishops for years have pushed for comprehensive immigration reform, but the nation's refugee and immigration policy, he said, is going the opposite direction, with a renewed emphasis on enforcement-only efforts.

The cardinal criticized a new Texas law that requires local police to enforce U.S. immigration laws. "Over the long term, (it) will weaken, and not strengthen, public safety," he said. "By requiring jurisdictions in Texas to act as immigration agents, the law would create fear in immigrant communities throughout Texas and divert police attention from their primary mission: to protect the general public."

Cardinal DiNardo lauded the position by Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo on the law.

At a news conference April 27, the day after the Texas House passed the bill, Acevedo said, "I'll be real frank with you: These police officers joined this profession not to stop people jaywalking and ask for their papers," adding that "if all the sudden I have a police officer who decides 'I'm going to go play ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agent all day and harass day laborers at Home Depot,' explain to me, when I lose my authority to tell my officers they can't do that, how does that enhance public safety? Tell me that with a straight face."

Cardinal DiNardo said Catholic teaching clearly "supports the right of a sovereign nation to ensure the integrity of its borders and to enforce its laws. We object, however, when laws and policies fail to respect human rights or fail to ensure due process in its justice system. Often the U.S. immigration system does not meet this test."

The bishops support the role of the Border Patrol but are concerned with border politics, he added.

The Catholic Church also believes, he said, the United States "must continue to protect those who ask for our protection from persecution in their homelands."

"As the world's richest nation, we are able to resettle far more than 50,000 refugees a year, all of whom are themselves fleeing terror of some kind," Cardinal DiNardo said. "As many of you know, the security process for vetting refugees is more stringent than for any other entrant into the United States, lasting as long as two years, in some cases. As a nation, we can ensure our security without sacrificing our humanity."

Even now, he noted, "we are witnessing a humanitarian crisis in the Northern Triangle of Central America, in which unaccompanied minors and family units are fleeing gang violence in their countries. We must not respond to this outflow with deterrence policies, marked by family detention, interdiction, and the lack of due process. Instead, we must respond with protection policies, to ensure that those who are at risk, especially the vulnerable, are not returned to danger."

Responding in this way, Cardinal DiNardo said, "is our responsibility under international agreements and to our fellow human beings."

The cardinal reviewed Catholic teaching from the pope and the U.S. bishops on immigration. "Christ himself experienced the feeling of leaving one's homeland," first in fleeing with Mary and Joseph into Egypt to escape Herod's terror, then as "an itinerant preacher, who, in the Gospel of Matthew, had 'no place to lay his head,'" Cardinal DiNardo said.

Pope Francis, he noted, has said that "migrants are not pawns on the chessboard of humanity," and has made migration "one of the signature issues of his papacy, opposing the 'globalization of indifference' to the plight of migrants and refugees."

Elements of the kind of immigration reform sought by the bishops include provisions for "undocumented immigrants who have built equities in our country and have been otherwise law-abiding (to be) put on a path to citizenship," Cardinal DiNardo said. "Instead of deporting such people, we should allow them a chance to get on the right side of the law, so they can fully contribute their skills and gifts to our society. We also need to increase the legal avenues for immigrants and families to migrate in a safe and orderly manner."

"We are at a crossroads in our nation's history," he said. The country can either "abdicate our moral responsibility and our global leadership in protecting human rights" or choose "to remain the leader in upholding humanitarian values in our nation and around the world."

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PEWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -- The man who parlayed a run on TV's "The Apprentice" into a winning presidential campaign said Tuesday the nation needs a stronger system of apprenticeship to match workers with millions of open jobs....

PEWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -- The man who parlayed a run on TV's "The Apprentice" into a winning presidential campaign said Tuesday the nation needs a stronger system of apprenticeship to match workers with millions of open jobs....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Jeff Sessions gave more than two hours of sometimes heated testimony Tuesday, with Democrats demanding details of matters including conversations with President Donald Trump, interactions with the Russian ambassador and the firing of FBI Director James Comey. The appearance before the Senate intelligence committee gave Sessions a chance to defend himself, but offered little new insight....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Jeff Sessions gave more than two hours of sometimes heated testimony Tuesday, with Democrats demanding details of matters including conversations with President Donald Trump, interactions with the Russian ambassador and the firing of FBI Director James Comey. The appearance before the Senate intelligence committee gave Sessions a chance to defend himself, but offered little new insight....

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HASSAN SHAM U2 CAMP, Iraq (AP) -- Food poisoning at a camp for displaced residents of Mosul has made more than 700 people sick, with hundreds hospitalized, Iraqi officials said Tuesday....

HASSAN SHAM U2 CAMP, Iraq (AP) -- Food poisoning at a camp for displaced residents of Mosul has made more than 700 people sick, with hundreds hospitalized, Iraqi officials said Tuesday....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- An American college student who has been in a coma, according to his parents, while serving a 15-year prison term in North Korea, was released and evacuated Tuesday as the Trump administration revealed a rare exchange with the reclusive country....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- An American college student who has been in a coma, according to his parents, while serving a 15-year prison term in North Korea, was released and evacuated Tuesday as the Trump administration revealed a rare exchange with the reclusive country....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. relationship with Russia is at an all-time low and deteriorating further, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Tuesday, yet he cautioned against taking steps that might close off promising avenues of communication between the two former Cold War foes....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. relationship with Russia is at an all-time low and deteriorating further, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Tuesday, yet he cautioned against taking steps that might close off promising avenues of communication between the two former Cold War foes....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Criticism of special counsel Robert Mueller used to be off limits. No more....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Criticism of special counsel Robert Mueller used to be off limits. No more....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump told Republican senators Tuesday that the House-passed health care bill he helped revive is "mean" and urged them to craft a version that is "more generous," congressional sources said....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump told Republican senators Tuesday that the House-passed health care bill he helped revive is "mean" and urged them to craft a version that is "more generous," congressional sources said....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Jeff Sessions heatedly denied on Tuesday having an undisclosed meeting with Russia's ambassador to the U.S. and declared it was a "detestable and appalling lie" to suggest he was aware of or took part in any collusion between Russia and the election campaign that sent Donald Trump to the White House....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Attorney General Jeff Sessions heatedly denied on Tuesday having an undisclosed meeting with Russia's ambassador to the U.S. and declared it was a "detestable and appalling lie" to suggest he was aware of or took part in any collusion between Russia and the election campaign that sent Donald Trump to the White House....

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Denver, Colo., Jun 13, 2017 / 11:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On June 13, the Fellowship of Catholic University Students will consecrate its mission to the Virgin Mary in perpetuity.The perpetual consecration will be live-streamed on the organization’s Facebook page.It will take place during Mass at the Oratory of Ave Maria University in Florida, where FOCUS will be holding its new staff training.June 13 marks the centenary of the second Marian apparition at Fatima. In that vision, Fatima seer Sister Lucia said, the Virgin Mary told her, “Jesus wishes to make use of you to make me known and loved. He wants to establish in the world devotion to my Immaculate Heart.”“It was the natural thing to do,” Curtis Martin, the organization’s founder and chief executive officer, told CNA. “We at FOCUS have always had a deep devotion to Our Lady.”“Since its founding, FOCUS has attracted staff, missionaries and students who have a devotion to the B...

Denver, Colo., Jun 13, 2017 / 11:08 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On June 13, the Fellowship of Catholic University Students will consecrate its mission to the Virgin Mary in perpetuity.

The perpetual consecration will be live-streamed on the organization’s Facebook page.

It will take place during Mass at the Oratory of Ave Maria University in Florida, where FOCUS will be holding its new staff training.

June 13 marks the centenary of the second Marian apparition at Fatima. In that vision, Fatima seer Sister Lucia said, the Virgin Mary told her, “Jesus wishes to make use of you to make me known and loved. He wants to establish in the world devotion to my Immaculate Heart.”

“It was the natural thing to do,” Curtis Martin, the organization’s founder and chief executive officer, told CNA. “We at FOCUS have always had a deep devotion to Our Lady.”

“Since its founding, FOCUS has attracted staff, missionaries and students who have a devotion to the Blessed Mother, which has been cultivated during their time with FOCUS. Marian devotion is simply part-and-parcel of being Catholic, so it is part-and-parcel of FOCUS.”

FOCUS, headquartered in Colorado, has grown to nearly 600 missionaries on 125 campuses since 1998.

“God has allowed our efforts to be fruitful, and we are seeking the grace for deeper sanctification of the individual missionary or staff member and the special blessing of their missionary work by petitioning Our Lady for assistance,” Martin said.

FOCUS plans to renew the consecration each year on June 13 and on December 12, the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Martin said he wanted to make sure the organization does not see the consecration as a once-a-year event. Rather, FOCUS is encouraging its staff and missionaries to live the consecration throughout the year.

In 2016 the organization consecrated its efforts to Our Lady of Guadalupe for a year while discerning more deeply what the Virgin Mary and Christ desired.

“Ultimately, we discerned that Our Lady’s call at Fatima was still for our time and for us,” Martin said.

The prayers will consecrate FOCUS “to Jesus through Mary, petitioning especially the graces offered at Fatima and Guadalupe.”

Martin said the wording recognizes that the consecration ultimately is to Christ though his Mother.

“It also emphasizes our need for the totality of her help, while recognizing that FOCUS as an apostolate is especially in need of particular graces,” he added.

Martin sees Our Lady of Fatima as representing a focus on a missionary’s interior life, while Our Lady of Guadalupe represents a focus on the exterior life.

“Both are directed toward the same end: the salvation of souls through the fulfillment of the Great Commission to know Jesus Christ and make disciples of all nations,” he said.

He cited Our Lady of Fatima’s request to pray, especially the rosary and devotions to the Sacred Heart, as well as her encouragement to make sacrifices for souls. He said devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe is an opportunity to pray for spiritual fruitfulness, given her precedent of inspiring the conversion of 10 million people.  

Martin said he has a particular devotion to Our Lady of Fatima, saying she “played an instrumental role in breathing new life into my dead faith.”

He said FOCUS reaches out to students “at a pivotal time in their lives” when they face the pressures of contemporary campus life.

“We share the gospel of Christ’s love, the truth of the Catholic faith and our very selves to help reach the world for Christ through our families, vocations and parishes,” he said.

 

 

An earlier version of this article was originally published May 9, 2017.

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