Noted Church Official Delivers Lecture on U.S. Immigration Policy on Staten Island Campus

January 30, 2007

As Joan Rosenhauer of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops stood at the podium on the St. John’s Staten Island campus yesterday, delivering a lecture on the Church’s stance on U.S. immigration policy, one’s imagination couldn’t help but float six miles northeast to Ellis Island, where torrents of 19th century migrants once docked in search of a better life.

Two-hundred years later the United States is still hallowed harbor to millions of non-natives vying to live the American dream. And as Catholics, Rosenhauer told the audience of 200 students, faculty and staff, we are called to shepherd their quest to live peacefully among us.

The lecture, titled “Give Me Your Tired and Your Poor,” was redelivered by Rosenhauer twice more yesterday; first on the Staten Island campus and then on the Queens campus. It was presented as part of the University’s 13th annual celebration of Founder’s Week, which honors St. Vincent de Paul and celebrates the St. John’s mission of serving the poor and disadvantaged. The theme of this year’s weeklong ceremony is Respect + Compassion = Solidarity.

“We use our faith and values to shape these immigration policies because we believe we are called to help the least among us,” said Rosenhauer, Project Coordinator of the USCCB Department of Social Development and World Peace and a specialist in applying Church teaching to U.S. legislation debates. Reflecting on the human right to dignity, homeland, asylum and migration, Rosenhauer said our ultimate challenge is to look upon the 11 million illegal immigrants within U.S. borders as “fellow children of God.”

“This lecture on justice for immigrants fits in perfectly with the Founder’s Week theme of solidarity because it means walking alongside our immigrant brothers and sisters,” said Paula Migliore, Campus Minister for Social Justice and Athletics.

Rosenhauer cited many Catholic sources defending the rights of immigrants, including Pope Benedict’s XVI’s first encyclical, Deus Caritas Es, stating that “charity must animate the entire lives of the lay faithful”; God’s “Great Commandment” to love thy neighbor; and the famous scripture passage from the Book of Matthew in which Jesus says “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed me.”

Rosenhauer, who co-runs the USCCB Committee of Faithful Citizenship and the Catholic Campaign Against Global Poverty, also broached the practical benefits to immigration. Citing U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics indicating that America will be short 2 million low-skilled workers by 2010, she noted that the U.S. economy depends on immigrant labor.

Presently, the USCCB is attempting to influence public policy to allow illegal immigrants a path to permanent residence, to establish a worker program that enables foreign-born workers to enter the country safely and legally and to reduce the waiting time for immigrants’ reunification with their families (which can take up to 10 years), among other things.

“I take to heart the St. John’s Vincentian model of taking care of people who are less fortunate,” said Dana Ortiz-Tulla, a senior criminal justice major from Staten Island, after the lecture. “So it was nice to learn today that the Church is able to enact policy. Everybody is allowed to have a voice, and it’s good to know that we have a voice as a Christian community.”