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Rescued migrants waited to disembark from an Armed Forces of Malta vessel in the Grand Harbor in Valetta, Malta, in May 2021. Pope Francis’ April 2-3 visit to Malta aims to encourage people to care for migrants and refugees.
Rescued migrants waited to disembark from an Armed Forces of Malta vessel in the Grand Harbor in Valetta, Malta, in May 2021. Pope Francis’ April 2-3 visit to Malta aims to encourage people to care for migrants and refugees.
Photo Credit: Darrin Zammit Lupi | Reuters

‘Unusual kindness’: Papal trip to remind Malta of its ‘biblical’ hospitality

Influx of refugees, government policies have raised concerns about treatment of migrants

VATICAN CITY — When a political prisoner and nearly 300 others were shipwrecked along the coast of Malta, the local population welcomed them, built a fire to warm them and provided them with food and shelter.

The story of migrants in dire need as they attempt to cross the sea sounds like a modern tale, but it took place nearly 2,000 years ago when St. Paul shipwrecked on the tiny Mediterranean archipelago.

Pope Francis’ April 2-3 visit to Malta aims to encourage its people to extend their biblically recorded hospitality to thousands of migrants and refugees arriving along the same shores the famed apostle once trod.

“I hope that the pope’s visit to Malta invigorates a bit more what the Acts (of the Apostles) has described as ‘unusual kindness,’” said Father Anton D’Amato, director of the Archdiocese of Malta’s Migrants Commission, referring to the theme of the papal visit.

“That we may rekindle the flame of hospitality in our hearts toward our neighbors, toward strangers, toward those who are far away from us. I hope personally — and as (I’m sure) migrants will hope for — that the pope will rekindle this flame of unusual kindness toward everyone,” Father D’Amato said.

Located between the Italian island of Sicily and the North African coast, Malta has been the first port of call for thousands of migrants and refugees crossing the sea from North Africa in search of a better life in Europe.

Current European Union policies have left Malta and other frontline countries such as Italy, Spain and Greece, on their own to rescue, shelter, verify and try to integrate the migrants.

However, a large influx of migrants arriving from Libya after June 2018 prompted Maltese authorities to pursue an agreement with the Libyan government to curb asylum seekers from leaving the North African country.

The agreement between the two countries relies on the Libyan Coast Guard to intercept and rescue migrants out at sea and return them to Libya, “even if migrants are clearly in distress within Malta’s search and rescue area,” explained Katrine Camilleri, director of Jesuit Refugee Service in Malta.

Several NGOs (human rights organizations) and the Council of Europe have expressed concerns over both Libya’s and Malta’s treatment of migrants, which is increasingly unusual and anything but kind.

Upon their return to Libya, refugees are often shipped to detention centers where, according to Amnesty International, many have been subjected to torture, as well as sexual and physical abuse.

Camilleri said March 25 that the disturbing treatment of migrants and refugees remains a “huge concern” for JRS and other charitable organizations attempting to assist migrants.

“I think in some way, (the pope’s) visit will be an opportunity for us as Maltese people (to see) that beyond our fears, our concerns about the changes and challenges that migration brings, it is never acceptable to subject people to treatment which violates their rights,” Camilleri said.

“The most sacred thing is human dignity and that needs to be at the forefront of every decision that we take as a people, as individuals, as communities, as a Church but even as a country,” Camilleri said.

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