U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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USCRI Honors Pope Francis

April 21, 2025

Today, USCRI reflects on the life and papacy that Pope Francis dedicated to the world’s most marginalized people, including refugees and migrants.

Pope Francis was elected in 2013 and became the first pope from the Americas. His first trip as Pope was to the Sicilian Island of Lampedusa, where he met with newly arrived migrants and delivered his infamous “globalization of indifference” speech.

“Immigrants dying at sea, in boats which were vehicles of hope and became vehicles of death. That is how the headlines put it. …

The globalization of indifference makes us all ‘unnamed,’ responsible, yet nameless and faceless.” – Homily of Holy Father Francis, July 8, 2013

That same year, the Pope commemorated the victims and survivors of a shipwreck off the coast of Lampedusa, which resulted in the deaths of over 360 people, mostly from Eritrea.

Throughout his 12-year papacy, Pope Francis brought awareness to multiple facets of forcible displacement. He issued apologies to Indigenous people in Latin America and Canada for the Catholic Church’s role in colonial conquests, which resulted in mass displacement and killings. He also criticized the criminalization of sexual orientation, which causes people to flee for fear of inhumane punishment. And in 2015, he issued an environmental manifesto with strong statements about how humans’ role in climate change exploits the poor and drives global displacement.

Pope Francis continually showed support for displaced populations. In February 2016, he delivered mass at the U.S.-Mexico border and prayed for the migrants who died on their harrowing journeys. Both in 2016 and 2021, he visited the island of Lesbos, Greece, to meet with individuals waiting for relief in a refugee camp. And in 2017, he called Rohingya refugees by name and asked them for forgiveness for the world’s indifference during a trip to Bangladesh.

“Pope Francis made refugees and migrants a priority during his papacy, and he urged world leaders to do the same. Today, we honor the compassion that he showed to forcibly displaced people and encourage our leaders and all of us to show that same strength in compassion,” said USCRI President and CEO Eskinder Negash.

In his Easter Sunday address, Pope Francis urged us all to find trust in others, including those who come from different places and bring new customs. He reminded the world of the devastating conflicts driving displacement today, including conflicts in Ukraine, Gaza, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sudan, and South Sudan.

Pope Francis also left a powerful reminder to those in power, who can choose to destroy families or diminish suffering. He asked world leaders “not to yield to the logic of fear,” but to use “‘weapons of peace’: weapons that build the future, instead of sowing seeds of death!” Pope Francis, “Urbi et Orbi,” April 20, 2025.

 

USCRI, founded in 1911, is a non-governmental, not-for-profit international organization committed to working on behalf of refugees and immigrants and their transition to a dignified life.

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