Pope Francis on Tuesday described Donald Trump’s migrant exile as a “major crisis”, which reprimanded the US President’s Seema Caesar, which asked Pontiff to “stick to the Catholic Church”.
In a letter to the US Bishops, Francis, 88, said that deporting those who harm their countries the dignity of migrants and can leave many weak and defenseless.
He wrote, “I instigate all men and women of all loyal Church, and all the men and women of goodwill, not to give discrimination with unnecessary suffering to our migrant and refugee brothers and sisters,” he wrote.
A letter published by the Vatican gave a rapidly a befitting reply from the Trump White House.
“I want him to stick to the Catholic Church and fix the limit,” Tom Homan told reporters, Tom Homan told reporters.
“He wants to attack us to gain our limits? He found a wall around the Vatican, isn’t it? … We cannot have a wall around the United States.”
Homan also said that he himself is a “lifelong Catholic”.
Tiny is located in the middle of the Vatican City State Rome, surrounded by a high wall punctured by Gates operated by Swiss guard of Pontif’s Swiss.
‘Badly end’
Francis has repeatedly defended the rights of migrants while leading the Catholic Church over his 10 years, urging world leaders to welcome more for those who escape from poverty or violence.
And he warned that Trump had returned to the White House last month that Republican pledged to carry out the biggest exile campaign in American history, expelting millions of unwarded immigrants, “disaster”.
Argentina Pontiff on Tuesday wrote Argentina Pontiff, “I have followed a close crisis with initiation of a program of exile in the United States.”
He admitted that “the right to a nation to protect themselves and communities to protect them from those who have committed violent or serious crimes before arrival”.
But he wrote that “in many cases, the task of deporting those people, has left its land for the reasons for severe poverty, insecurity, exploitation, harassment or severe deteriorating environment, damages the dignity of many men and women. , And damages the dignity of the whole families, and the whole families.
Exile “keeps them in a position of special vulnerability and rescue”, he wrote.
“This is not a minor issue – an authentic rule of law is verified properly in dignified treatment, which is worthy of all, especially the poorest and most marginalized,” he continued.
He said: “This does not disrupt the development of a policy that controls systematic and legal migration. However, this development cannot come through the privilege of something and the sacrifice of others.
“What is made on the basis of force, not on the truth about the same dignity of every human being, it starts badly and will end badly.”
Francis has criticized Trump for his anti -migrant policies in the past.
In February 2016, when asked about the expected stance of the then-American President, the Pope said: “Anyone, whoever wants to build the walls and not the bridge is not a Christian” .
And last year Francis made a rare staging during the US election season, which criticizes the rigorous migrant approach “insanity” and criticizes the right -wing American Catholic figures for a highly conservative trend.
In May 2017, when Trump was in his first term, he received a half -hour meeting in Vatican.
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