POPE: MAY WE TURN OUR FRONTIERS INTO SPACES FOR MUTUAL ENRICHMENT

POPE: MAY WE TURN OUR FRONTIERS INTO SPACES FOR MUTUAL ENRICHMENT

Pope Francis met participants of the European project “Snapshots from the Borders” in audience on Thursday, thanking them for their work aimed at promoting the common good and tearing down barriers.

By Vatican News

Pope Francis greeted participants of the European project “Snapshots from the Borders” by describing their project as “a forward-thinking one.” He said that through it, they are promoting a “deeper comprehension of migration,” allowing European societies to “give a more human and coordinated response to the challenges of modern-day migration.”
The project

Snapshots from the Borders is a project aimed at informing European citizens about the realities surrounding migration today. For the past three years, the organisation has been bringing voices and effective solutions from borders where hot-button issues regarding migration are a concrete reality raising awareness, sharing knowledge, encouraging participation and showing citizens that they have an important role to play.

Migrants in camp Moira camp on island of Lesbos –

(Religious leaders and humanitarian organizations call for protection of migrants and refugees after a major fire gutted Europe’s largest refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos, destroying dwellings and causing thousands to flee. https://www.vaticannews.va/en/church/news/2020-09/fire-in-moria-camp-eu-urged-to-search-for-solution-to-migrant.html)

“No one can remain indifferent to the human tragedies that continue to occur in different regions of the world.”

“The network of local authorities and civil society organisations, which was born from this project, aims to contribute positively to the development of migration policies that respond to this aim,” said the Pope.

Realities today
Pope Francis went on to state that, “the current migration scenario is complex and often has dramatic implications.” The global interdependencies that determine migration flows should be studied and better understood, he said, adding that the many challenges affecting the world are challenges affecting everyone. “No one can remain indifferent to the human tragedies that continue to occur in different regions of the world.

Walls solve nothing
Recalling his meeting with the Bishops of the Mediterranean in Bari last February, Pope Francis noted that many of those suffering in the Mediterranean are fleeing terror in search of a better life. Often these people are rejected and become victims of indifference and “we never accept that those seeking hope by sea die without ever receiving help,” he said. Though welcome and integration are not easy stages of the process “it is unthinkable to face it by raising walls.”

Faced with these challenges the need for “concrete solidarity and shared responsibility” become apparent, both at the national and the international level, said the Pope. “We must act together, not alone,” he added.

New approaches
Pope Francis then expressed the importance of “changing how we see and recount migration.” It is about putting people at the centre: their faces and their stories. “This is why projects such as yours are so important,” said the Pope. Inspired by a culture of encounter, you try to “propose new approaches” that make up the journey towards a “new humanity,” as a philosophy of life, spirituality and behaviour, he explained.

Finally, Pope Francis noted that frontiers have always been considered “barriers of division.” Instead, he said, “they can become ‘windows’, spaces of mutual knowledge, of mutual enrichment, of communion in diversity; places where models are experimented to overcome the difficulties that new arrivals entail for native communities.”