Pope Leo’s critique of Trump emboldens top US Catholics to help immigrants

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

FILE PHOTO: Law enforcement officers prevent religious leaders from entering the Broadview ICE facility and offering communion to immigrants detained inside, during a Catholic Mass, led by Bishop Jose Maria Garcia Maldonado, observed by interfaith leaders, community members, and volunteers,  after U.S. President Donald Trump ordered an increased federal law enforcement presence to assist in crime prevention, in the Chicago suburb of Broadview, Illinois, U.S., November 1, 2025. REUTERS/Leah Millis/ File Photo/File Photo

Law enforcers preventing religious leaders from entering a detention facility in Chicago and offering communion to immigrants detained inside.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

Pope Leo’s recent criticisms of US President Donald Trump’s anti-immigration policies are emboldening Catholic efforts to help immigrants caught up in the administration’s hardline crackdown, according to senior church leaders.

After Pope Leo called on Nov 4

for “deep reflection”

in the US about the administration’s treatment of immigrants, several top bishops, as well as the country’s main network of Catholic nuns and its national charity federation, told Reuters they would step up their work.

“Pope Leo’s comments strengthen the resolve of those of us in the United States who remain deeply committed to welcoming the stranger,” said Ms Kerry Alys Robinson, president and chief executive of Catholic Charities USA, a national federation of 168 Catholic charity agencies.

Pope Leo, the first American pope, has been ramping up his disapproval of the Trump administration’s treatment of immigrants.

“There’s a deep reflection that needs to be made in terms of what’s happening,” the Pontiff said on Nov 4 when asked about the condition of migrants detained at a federal facility in Broadview, Illinois, near Chicago.

“I know how much it means to detainees and their families that Pope Leo is paying close attention to the suffering of migrants and their families here,” Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich told Reuters.

Cardinal Cupich, who leads an archdiocese including about two million Catholics, said the Church’s teachings about helping immigrants cannot be disregarded.

“This is not some abstract value that people who say they are Christian can easily ignore,” he said. “No, this is the kind of moral imperative that is tested in the here and now.”

The US Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facility in Broadview, said in a statement on Nov 5 detainees there are held under humane conditions and receive three meals a day.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said Mr Trump was elected based on commitments to American voters that included deporting “criminal illegal aliens”.

“He is keeping his promise to the American people,” Ms Jackson told Reuters.

Ramping up criticisms of Trump

Pope Leo, originally from the Chicago area,

was elected in May

to replace the late Pope Francis. He tends to take a more cautious tone in public than his predecessor, who often grabbed headlines with surprise, off-the-cuff remarks.

But Pope Leo has been steadily increasing

his criticisms of Mr Trump

.

In September, the Pope said the US administration’s treatment of immigrants was “inhuman”, in comments that drew a heated backlash from some prominent conservative Catholics.

Some critics, who earlier praised the new Pope for his more reserved style, have expressed shock that Pope Leo continues to criticise Mr Trump, who is seen as a champion by many conservatives around the world.

After the Pope’s remarks in September, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said she rejected the characterisation of inhumane treatment of immigrants in the US.

It is unusual for the leader of the 1.4 billion-strong Catholic Church to comment directly on politics in any individual country. Vatican officials said Pope Leo cares especially deeply about the treatment of immigrants.

Pope Leo, the first American pontiff, has been increasingly critical of US President Donald Trump.

PHOTO: AFP

Cardinal Michael Czerny, a close advisor to Pope Leo, said the Pope is “expressing the concerns that should be in the heart of every Christian and of every citizen”.

“The Golden Rule, in other words: Do unto others as you would wish them to do unto you,” said Cardinal Czerny.

Immigrants front and centre

El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz, who leads a Catholic diocese spanning nine counties in southern Texas bordering Mexico, said the Pope’s most recent comments “certainly reinforce my own commitment to speak up for (immigrants) and to redouble my own efforts”.

Bishop Seitz, who also heads the migration committee of the US bishops’ conference, said the conference is discussing whether to issue a statement about the Trump administration’s treatment of immigrants during its annual meeting, to be held in Baltimore from Nov 10 to 13.

“Without question, this issue will be a major, if not the major, topic that we undertake during the bishops’ meeting,” he said.

Pope Leo was asked on Nov 4 about migrants at the Broadview facility who have been refused the opportunity to receive holy communion, an important religious obligation. Many of the migrants entering the United States come from Latin America, a predominantly Catholic region.

He said the detainees’ spiritual rights need to be respected and cited scripture passages indicating Jesus will judge Christians after death on how they welcomed immigrants.

“I would certainly invite the authorities to allow pastoral workers to attend to the needs of those people,” the Pope said.

Heightened turn

A delegation of clergy, including a Catholic bishop who is one of Cardinal Cupich’s deputies, tried to bring the inmates at Broadview holy communion on Nov 1, the Catholic feast of All Saints, but was denied access to the facility.

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said the ICE facility in Broadview was a field office that is used for processing and short-term detention, and that it was not “standard operating procedure”, due to security concerns, to have religious services there.

Ms McLaughlin said religious groups were “more than welcome” to provide services at ICE’s longer-term detention centres.

Bishop Seitz said his diocese was recently granted permission to celebrate Mass inside an ICE detention facility in El Paso, which he took part in. He said it was an emotional experience, with some detainees crying during the service, and a Catholic delegation now plans to go there every Sunday.

The detainees in Chicago are part of Mr Trump’s aggressive immigration crackdown in that city, where DHS says more than 3,000 people have been held.

A raid on a Spanish-language immersion daycare on the city’s North Side on Nov 5, where a woman was dragged out of the building while screaming, marked a heightened turn in the crackdown, which has also caught up US citizens and people with no criminal record.

“We stand with Pope Leo in affirming that how we welcome the stranger is a defining measure of the values of this country,” the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, an umbrella group that represents Catholic nuns across the US, told Reuters.

“We urge the authorities to cease violent action against migrants, ensure their access to care and safeguard their human rights while they are detained,” the group said. REUTERS

See more on