-
Gómez a living rebuttal of seeing bishops as ‘partisan’ on immigration
Although the U.S. bishops have long been charged with being in bed with either the political left or right whenever they take positions on public policy issues, if you can look at Archbishop José Gómez of Los Angeles’s advocacy of immigration reform and still think so, one has to ask, “Then what would it take to change that?”
-
Archbishop Gomez Calls Ending DACA “A Tragedy”
In his weekly column in the Archdiocese’s news magazine, Angelus, Archbishop José H. Gomez called on President Trump and members of Congress returning to Washington from their August recess to find common ground on immigration reform and make the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA) permanent.
-
Archdiocese of Hartford to Collect Funds for Victims of Harvey
The Archdiocese of Hartford will have a special collection for the victims of Hurricane Harvey on Sept. 9 and 10.
-
Archbishop Gomez prods President Trump to change DACA position
President Donald Trump’s promise to treat undocumented minors with “great heart” needs to be reflected in policy that gives them legal protection, not deportation, Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles has said.
-
USCCB leader invites bishops to take up collection for storm recovery
Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles, vice president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, asked bishops across the country to consider a special collection to assist victims of Hurricane Harvey along the Gulf Coast.
-
U.S. Bishops to take up special collection in support of Hurricane Harvey victims
Archbishop José H. Gomez of Los Angeles, vice-president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), has requested that all U.S. bishops consider taking up a special collection in support of the dioceses affected by Hurricane Harvey.
-
L.A. Archbishop: ‘Deportation alone is not an immigration policy’
As a Sept. 5 deadline looms for President Donald Trump to either cancel a program providing relief from deportation for children of undocumented immigrants or face a lawsuit by 10 state attorneys general, Archbishop José Gómez of Los Angeles on Tuesday said eliminating the protection would be “tragic” and that “deportation alone is not an immigration policy.”
-
Moving forward on immigration
As members of Congress return to Washington from their August recess, once more the air is filled with rumors and tensions over immigration.
-
MARY, FOUNDRESS OF AMERICA
Earlier this summer, I led the first pilgrimage from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles to the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Like many other immigrants to this country, I have a strong devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe. I learned it from my parents when I was growing up in Monterrey, Mexico. Many summers, my mother and father would take my sisters and me on a 600-mile journey to visit our grandparents in Mexico City. And when we went, we would make a pilgrimage to the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe. My experience was not unique. In Mexico, many Catholic families try to make a pilgrimage to the Basilica at least once a year.
-
Cardinal Cupich and Archbishop Gomez Strongly Denounce Racism
n Chicago Catholic, Cardinal Blase Cupich writes:
While humanity is divided by culture, heritage and language, God created us to be one human family, one race — the human race.