Caritas Internationalis Takes Oscar Romero as Patron Salvadoran priest will be beatified this Saturday

  World

The Church’s international charity organization has adopted a third patron, Salvadoran priest Oscar Romero, who will be beatified this Saturday.

Caritas Internationalis’ General Assembly closed today with member organisations adopting a vision of “One Human Family, Caring for Creation”.

The 400-plus representatives from more than 160 national Caritas organizations gathered in Rome also elected a new president and treasurer and ratified the nomination of the secretary general this week.

Newly-elected president, Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, archbishop of Manila, said, “Pope Francis gave us inspirational words on seeking to expand our work at the beginning of our General Assembly.  With the launch of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Pope Francis’s encyclical on ecology and the UN climate meeting in Paris this year, Caritas will work towards putting the human family and human dignity at the heart of development.”

Regarding the SDGs, the final message adopted by the General Assembly states that “no target should be considered as met unless achieved for all income and social groups; this fundamental, person-centred strategy must be central”.

The message urges governments to look beyond their own borders and to recognise the moral imperative that is inherent in care for creation.

Caritas delegates also called attention to the plight of Christians who suffer from religious persecution in Syria and Iraq and of migrants and refugees all over the world: “We urge governments to build safe havens and humanitarian corridors, rather than fences, walls or programmes of interdiction at sea.”

Michel Roy was reconfirmed as secretary general of the Caritas confederation and a new board was appointed. Alexander Bodmann of Austria was elected as new treasurer.  South Sudan became the 165th national member organisation of the Caritas confederation.

Blessed Oscar Romero, who was murdered for standing with the poor in El Salvador, joins Mother Teresa and St. Martin de Porres as patrons of Caritas Internationalis.

(Take from zenit.org)