As the issue of Displaced Persons (DPs) solidified in the postwar years, the US Catholic bishops also arrived at a new understanding of their potential role in the massive project of resettlement. John J. O’Grady, in this speech before a local organization dedicated to helping DPs, manages to sum up most of the central issues of the situation. Basically, O’Grady says that the DPs cannot go back to Soviet-dominated countries, nor can they simply be absorbed into the economy of West Germany, which has barely enough material to support its own people.
Echoing a theme heard elsewhere, O’Grady says that people cannot be leisurely about finding new homes for the refugees, or else they will become disillusioned and eventually very difficult to integrate back into ordinary society. Current US laws on immigration are also too narrow and restrictive, and will only complicate and delay the resettlement process. It is precisely the mission of the US Catholic bishops, then, as well as the mission of other religious denominations, to make Americans aware of this humanitarian crisis and to awaken their generosity, before it is too late.
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