Hundreds Join El Paso Bishop’s Protest at U.S.Mexico Border
Mar 25, 2025
EL PASO, Texas (OSV News) – Mass deportations and asylum bans – part of the Trump administration’s rapid changes to U.S. immigration policy – destroy communities and human dignity while constituting a “war on the poor,” said Bishop Mark J. Seitz of El Paso, Texas.
The bishop, who chairs
the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee on Migration, shared his thoughts during a prayer vigil held on Monday, March 24, at Sacred Heart Church in El Paso, which capped a rally and march that began in the city’s downtown San Jacinto Plaza.
“Aquí Estamos: March and Vigil to Stand with Migrants” drew hundreds of participants, including immigration advocates, Catholic and interfaith clergy, religious, and lay faithful.
The gathering, spoken in English and Spanish throughout, was attended by Catholic prelates from the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, including Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller of San Antonio; Archbishop John C. Wester of Santa Fe, New Mexico; Bishop Peter Baldacchino of Las Cruces, New Mexico; Bishop John Stowe of Lexington, Kentucky; and Bishop Noël Simard of Valleyfield, Quebec.
Also on hand was Cardinal Fabio Baggio of Bassano del Grappa, Italy, the undersecretary of the Vatican’s Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development.
Speaking in Spanish, Cardinal Baggio invited attendees at the vigil to pray for “all the victims of the different migratory routes” in the world, from Africa and Asia to Europe and the U.S.
“Thousands and thousands of brothers and sisters who, simply looking for a better future or refuge, lost their way,” he said in lament.
According to the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration, 2024 was the deadliest year on record for migrants, with at least 8,938 perishing on migration routes.
The El Paso rally, march and vigil – organized by Bishop Seitz in partnership with Hope Border Institute, an El Paso-based immigrant advocacy nonprofit – took place on the feast of St. Óscar Romero, the martyred archbishop of San Salvador known for his fierce defense of human rights and the marginalized in El Salvador.
The rally’s timing was “no accident,” especially as such rights have become increasingly endangered amid an “attack on immigrants today,” Bishop Seitz said in his address at the vigil.
The denial of asylum and the threat of mass deportations represent “a fundamental attack on the human community” and on “Jesus’ vision of a fully reconciled humanity,” he said. “Mass deportations are another tool to keep people afraid, to keep a people divided, to extinguish the charity and love that keep a people alive.”
Catholic social teaching on immigration holds that people have the right to migrate to sustain their lives, while nations have the right to regulate their borders and control immigration, although they must do so with both justice and mercy.
But speakers at the rally pointed to recent U.S. immigration policy changes as exceeding those moral parameters, instead eroding human rights and fostering division.
Children are not spared in the administration’s crackdown on immigration, said attorney Melissa M. Lopez, executive director of the Diocese of El Paso’s Estrella del Paso (formerly Migrant and Refugee Services), which provides free immigration legal services.
Lopez advised the crowd that her office had received notice on Friday, March 21, that the federal government had terminated its contract with the Acacia Center for Justice, which provides legal services to unaccompanied migrant minors through a national network of providers, including Lopez’s team.
“The federal government has decided that children should go to court by themselves, that children should be forced to understand asylum law and apply for asylum on their own, and that they don’t deserve … having somebody stand alongside them,” she said. Lopez added that she lost 18 staff at her agency, which served “almost 30,000 children last year,” due to the contract termination.
Dylan Corbett, executive director of Hope Border Institute, described the current immigration climate as “difficult” and a “dark moment.” He told rally attendees that “everything that is beautiful about this community” on the border “is under attack right now.”
Following the rally, participants – some holding signs stating, “Jesus was an immigrant” and “Migration is a human right” – walked the half mile from the plaza to the vigil at Sacred Heart Church, led by Bishop Seitz and his fellow prelates and preceded by drummers and dancers.
“Community is an exchange of gifts, where we gift our lives to one another for the benefit of one another,” Bishop Seitz said at the vigil. “We grow together, and we bear one another’s burdens.”
Christ offered himself in sacrifice – one to which Romero, through his own martyrdom, united himself – for “that body” that is divinely created humanity, said Bishop Seitz.
“We belong to one another, brothers and sisters,” he said. “We belong to each other.”
That interrelatedness extends well beyond the borders of the U.S., said Bishop Seitz.
“Migration is connected with the fate of our country,” he said. “Our relationship to this issue as El Paso and as the United States reveals what we truly value, what we truly honor. Hopefully, we put our faith not in money and power and rivalry and dominance and empire. This would be idolatry of the worst sort.”
At the border, “we see that (in) this war on the poor, everything is disposable – land, water, environment, our health, women … marriages, the unborn, the poor, human rights,” said Bishop Seitz.
The post Hundreds Join El Paso Bishop’s Protest at U.S.-Mexico Border appeared first on Today's Catholic. ...read more read less