Catholic bishops in Germany and Austria have urged their countries to continue accepting refugees, despite demands for new restrictions after New Year’s Eve violence in Cologne and other cities.
“We need a reduction in numbers, but fixing an upper limit would be difficult,” Bishop Stephan Ackermann of Trier told the Trierischer Volksfreund newspaper last week. “We also need flexibility. But it’s up to politicians to say how this can be achieved in practice, and it can’t be done only at a national level”.
Meanwhile, the German Church’s special representative for refugees said he believed a cap would violate the Geneva Convention and Germany’s Basic Law.
“Christians cannot allow people who’ve faced untold suffering and are needing help to encounter closed borders,” Archbishop Stefan Hesse of Hamburg told Germany’s Neue Osnabrucker Zeitung.
After police said refugees and migrants were responsible for New Year’s Eve attacks on women, pressure has grown on the government to reduce the refugee influx to Germany, which received 1.1 million during 2015.
At a meeting of European Union interior ministers, several countries said they would maintain new border controls until 2018 unless EU-wide measures were implemented.
However, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, president of the German bishops’ conference, and Cardinal Rainer Woelki of Cologne appealed for more admissions. Cardinal Woelki said in a speech that Europe would not “be saved by battening down the hatches”.
In neighbouring Austria, the bishops’ conference said the human right to asylum was an “obligation under international law”, but cautioned that “legitimate concerns” about mass admissions should also taken seriously.
“It is up to political leaders to conduct this process with a sense of proportion,” said a statement on the bishops’ website. “The Church can play an important role given the many languages spoken in Catholic communities. But migrants should also accept, as a prerequisite, the unconditional validity of human rights, as well as our democratic constitution and the equal status of men and women.”
At least 22,000 refugees are currently being housed by Catholic parishes and institutions in Germany, according to Church sources.
Archbishop forced to leave parish after complaints
Archbishop John Nienstedt has left a temporary position with a parish in Michigan following complaints by some Catholics and clerical abuse campaigners.
“After discussion with the archbishop conveying the expressed concerns by the faithful people of our community, he offered to withdraw from the diocese and I agreed,” wrote Fr John Fleckenstein, parish priest of St Philip Catholic Church in Battle Creek, to the area’s Catholics.
“Archbishop Nienstedt has a deep concern for the Church, and in light of the unintended discord that his presence was causing, he decided that this would be the best course of action so the Church can remain focused on its mission,” the priest added.
Fr Fleckenstein announced Archbishop Nienstedt’s arrival to the parish in his parish’s bulletin last month. He said he had known Archbishop Nienstedt for 20 years.
Archbishop Nienstedt resigned as the head of the Archdiocese of St Paul and Minneapolis in June following the filing of criminal and civil charges alleging that the archdiocese had not protected children in the case of Curtis Wehmeyer, a former priest.
Leonardo DiCaprio meets Pope
Pope Francis gave a private audience to the actor Leonardo DiCaprio last week.
He gave the star of The Revenant leatherbound copies of his two encyclicals and received a book of works by Hieronymus Bosch in return.
DiCaprio pointed to a depiction of hell in The Garden of Earthly Delights triptych and said it seemed to represent “what’s going on in the environment”. The film star thanked the Pope in Italian for the meeting and kissed his ring.
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