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Press Releases
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6 July 2006
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On eve of UN General Assembly hearings on Migration
and Development:
Church Committed to New Era of Migration in Age of Globalization
3-day meeting of ICMC Members worldwide endorses strategy of broader
response
As movement of goods and services becomes ever faster and freer
in a globalized world, the movement of people cries out for better
attention. "What the world needs is a globalization of solidarity,"
said Cardinal Raffaele R. Martino, President of the Pontifical
Council for Justice and Peace, as he addressed the 54th meeting
of ICMC's worldwide membership in Rome this weekend. "Migration
is a journey of hope; an opportunity to give and to share."
Quoting Pope Benedict's recent encyclical Deus Caritas Est (God
is Love), Cardinal Martino reminded ICMC's members from Europe,
Africa, North and South America, Asia and Australia that it is
essential in their work with refugees, migrants and internally
displaced persons to "distinguish themselves not just responding
to immediate needs" but in ways that "enable people
to experience the fullness of their humanity."
Cardinal Theodore McCarrick of Washington joined in calling for
policies and programs that place greater emphasis on the centrality
of the human being in matters of migration and development. "Pope
John XXIII said that 'development is the word for peace',"
Cardinal McCarrick recalled. "Helping people who are displaced
to find a place to settle is the great cause for development,
and the great cause for peace."
Both Cardinals and another 40 Bishops and leaders of Catholic
organizations endorsed the strategic plan that ICMC will pursue
through the end of the decade, adding to its traditional work
with refugees and other forced migrants new activities and advocacy
related to economic migration and the connection between international
migration and development. ICMC will be one of the 12 speakers
for the hearings that the United Nations General Assembly is holding
on migration and development July 12th in New York. The new strategy
will also increase the dynamics between the Bishops' Conferences
on the basis of the tremendous global challenge that migration
issues present today. ICMC's Council also elected a new President,
Mr. John Michael Klink, from the USA. Mr. Klink will take up duties
in 2007 and in the meantime work closely with Professor Stefano
Zamagni, the outgoing President, during the course of this year.
Among other speakers were Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, Permanent
Representative of the Holy See to the UN in Geneva and Bishop
Nicholas DiMarzio of the Diocese of Brooklyn, New York. Bishop
DiMarzio spoke of his work as one of the 19 international members
of the esteemed Global Commission on International Migration,
which recently issued a groundbreaking report that contains 33
recommendations for greater cooperation and coherence in government
responses to international migration. A copy of Bishop DiMarzio's
remarks is available at www.icmc.net.
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