Daniel P. Horan: The treatment of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers at our nation's border is something for which debate is not needed, because the moral imperative is plain as day.
One of the pope's closest advisers, Cardinal Michael Czerny, encouraged U.S. Catholic leaders to reclaim the words on the Statue of Liberty, "even when some federal, state or local leaders are hostile towards immigration."
The U.S. Catholic Church may be missing out on an opportunity to increase and enrich its ranks if dioceses and parishes don't reach out to refugees, migrants, and people whose work demands that they travel.
Commentary: What happened between November, when Biden committed to 125,000 refugees, and now? Simply put, reality set in on the political and operational challenges of managing migration to the U.S.
Catholic refugee resettlement groups hoped that on day one in office, President Biden would officially authorize increasing the number of refugees allowed into the U.S. Eighty-six days later, they're still waiting.
Catholic bishops in Kenya are urging the government to shelve plans to close two refugee camps in the north, which host refugees who fled civil war and famine in Somalia and South Sudan.