“Welcoming the stranger”, the Call and the Challenge
					
					by Sr. Brenda Walsh, Racine Dominican
				
			
		
	
The call to 
“welcome the stranger” has Biblical roots. In Matthew’s Gospel (25: 35) we hear 
the call: “I was hungry and you fed me, thirsty and you gave me a drink, a 
stranger and you took me in and welcomed me into your home.” In Paul’s letter to 
the Romans we read: “Welcome one another, just as Christ has welcomed you for 
the glory of God.” The Catholic Church has offered a persistent call to welcome 
the strangers in their midst by reaching out to immigrants and working toward 
comprehensive immigration reform and other justice issues. 
 
Pope Benedict XV1 
calls on all Catholics to offer hospitality to those most in need. He unveiled 
the theme for the 98th world day of migrants and refugees to be 
celebrated on Jan 15th, 2012. The pope reminds people around the 
world that the present time calls for all to intensify their missionary 
activities around the globe. People who are migrating are seeking a better life 
for themselves and their families, or hoping to flee from threats of 
persecution, war and violence. The Pope calls people “to accompany the migrants 
with prayer, solidarity and charity, as well as in fostering new political, 
economic and social planning that promotes respect for the dignity of every 
human person.”
         
 The Wisconsin 
Bishops recently issued a letter on immigration and encouraged Catholics to 
welcome immigrants and back comprehensive immigration reform. They reminded 
people that we do this not only to  solve the critical political issue but also 
for the sake ‘of the millions of children and adults who live fearfully in the 
shadows, are vulnerable to exploitation, whose family members are being cruelly 
isolated, detained and deported. Our Catholic faith can and must transcend 
political and cultural turmoil. We must remember all of us are migrants on this 
earth, traveling together in hope toward our Loving God. The feast of our Lady 
of Guadalupe was chosen as the day to promote this message. 
 
The Bishops 
reminded people of the important role that immigrants have played in the 
building of our nation.  They invite us to relate the immigration issue to the 
sanctity of human life and to uphold the dignity of every human being created in 
the image of God. There are 12 million immigrants in our midst and we must work 
to help them live safe and dignified lives. We can work to help those interested 
to find a path to citizenship, to secure work for themselves and their families 
and to live dignified lives. Many are being detained, deported, separated from 
their families or in dire need of the basics of life. This situation needs to 
change drastically and be replaced with just and workable solutions for them.
 
What can we do to 
help resolve pressing problem named by the Bishops, that immigrants are facing 
every day?
 
First we need to 
learn as much as possible about this very complex issue. Join a group that is 
working with immigrants and people of other cultures. Look at the fears we or 
other people may have that may isolate us in self-protection or isolation from 
people of other cultures. Better to take a learning stance and be open to 
listening to people of other cultures. Our hospitality is more than a legal 
obligation. It means opening our minds and hearts  to the culture and values of 
other people just as Jesus did.
 
I will never forget 
the refugees I saw in Thailand. They were coming from Laos to enter a refugee 
camp in that country and it was distressing to see the condition they were in. 
Many had lost limbs, were badly mutilated and the children had bloated stomachs 
as they crossed the border. They were filled with fear and anxiety and lived in 
great distress. By accepting them and loving them, some at least were able to 
reclaim their own human dignity and after a long time in the camp were able to 
make their way to another country to find a home. The time in the camp was 
designed to help them prepare for the transition and a new life in another 
country. It was a challenge and a privilege to walk with them  and to help them 
prepare for a more dignified life. 
 
We are also called 
to take a look at our own sense of white power and privilege and see if we use 
it only to meet our own needs.  How can we use it to welcome the stranger in our 
midst and to open doors of opportunity for them, to treat them like equals and 
help them claim and live with a sense of dignity and self self-respect and 
acquire what they need to sustain themselves and their families? Start a 
discussion at your church or with organizations you belong to and share your 
experience of welcoming a stranger. 
 
Here are some 
questions to consider:
	- 
	
How do we 
	address the stereotyping of strangers? 
 
	- 
	
Do you ever 
	want to keep silent rather than speaking up for what is right and just? 
 
	- 
	
What would it 
	mean to you to offer hospitality to strangers? 
 
	- 
	
What are the 
	risks and the challenges, the joys and the hopes?
 
	- 
	
What blessings 
	might you experience in relating to strangers? 
 
	- 
	
We must 
	remember we are all God’s people and members of the household of God. How 
	will we prepare to respond to this daunting challenge? 
 
	- 
	
God’s love and 
	hospitality is for everyone. They like us are strangers and pilgrims on 
	their journey home to our God. 
 
	- 
	
We need to 
	build bridges to welcome the strangers in our churches, neighborhoods or 
	wherever they are. 
 
Let us continue the journey with 
courage, conviction and hope and work to build a better future for all.