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Borders that are no longer walls, but “privileged places of encounter “ between all the components of a “colourful” society, capable of “dreaming together” to build a common future through “more sustainable development, balanced and inclusive.”
This is the vison of Pope Francis contained in his message for the 107th World Day of Migrants and Refugees – which will be celebrated on Sunday 26 September 2021 – entitled “Towards an ever wider we”, made public today.
The title chosen for the message, explained during the presentation of the document Father Fabio Baggio, CS, under-secretary of the Migrants and Refugees Section of the Dicastery for integral human development, is “an appeal to ensure that” there may be more ‘others’, but only one ‘we’ “(Fratelli tutti, 35). And this universal ‘we’ must become a reality first of all within the Church, which is called to make communion in diversity”.
“It is an invitation to everyone, because we are committed to restoring our human family”. Thus the Pope, in the video on the next day, shown for the first time today in the Vatican press office on the occasion of the presentation of the message. “We are like many grains of sand, all different and unique but which together can form a beautiful beach, a true work of art”.
The “we”, Francis writes, is that of God’s creative plan who “created us male and female, different yet complementary, in order to form a “we” destined to become ever more numerous in the succession of generations”.
“The present time, however, shows that this “we” willed by God is broken and fragmented, wounded and disfigured. This becomes all the more evident in moments of great crisis, as is the case with the current pandemic. Our “we”, both in the wider world and within the Church, is crumbling and cracking due to myopic and aggressive forms of nationalism (cf. Fratelli Tutti, 11) and radical individualism (cf. ibid., 105). And the highest price is being paid by those who most easily become viewed as others: foreigners, migrants, the marginalized, those living on the existential peripheries.”
“In reality, we are all in the same boat and we are called to commit ourselves so that there are no more walls that separate us, no more others, but only one us, as big as all of humanity”. Hence a twofold appeal. The Pope asks believers to commit themselves to making the Church more and more Catholic, to “all men and women of the world” to transform walls into bridges.
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