Friday, June 12, 2026

Pope Leo XIV makes heartfelt appeal for migrants: ‘Human dignity has no passport’

LAS PALMAS, Spain (RNS) — At a Canary Islands port marked by migrant suffering, Pope Leo XIV told survivors of trafficking that their dignity cannot be taken from them and warned Europe that every boat arriving on its shores poses a question about what remains of its humanity.


Pope Leo XIV blesses a migrant during a meeting with organizations working with migrants in Arguineguín at the Canary Islands, Spain, Thursday, June 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Claire Giangravè
June 11, 2026 
RNS

LAS PALMAS, Spain (RNS) — Pope Leo XIV delivered a heartfelt speech addressing migrants on Thursday (June 11), reminding them of their worth and dignity even as they suffer at the hands of traffickers and mafias. He also spoke directly to the church and states — especially in Europe — underlining their duty to promote and protect migrants.

Leo said those who exploit migrants are “monsters” — as are people who are indifferent to their suffering. He called for a “conversion,” allowing people to see migrants beyond mere statistics.

“Only then can we understand that that little girl could be our daughter, and that those faces could be part of our family. Then, our conscience is left with no excuses,” he said. “Human dignity has no passport and does not lose its value when crossing a border.”

He made his remarks at the port of Arguineguín, in Las Palmas in Gran Canary Island, where he listened to the stories of migrants and people who help them. Leo is visiting the Canary Islands for the last leg of his weeklong visit to Spain.

While the Canaries, eight islands roughly 60 miles from the African coast, may be considered a vacation spot for wealthy Europeans, the reality on the ground tells a deadlier tale, where tens of thousands of migrants arrive each year stranded on its rocky shores and thousands more die in its surrounding waters.

Arguineguín became known as the port of shame in 2020, when more than 3,000 migrants crammed into a space meant for 500. Photos of exhausted migrants, who had traveled the deadly Atlantic route from West Africa, sleeping on concrete exposed an inability to manage the crisis.




A volunteer meets Pope Leo XIV during a meeting with organizations working with migrants in Arguineguín at the Canary Islands, Spain, Thursday, June 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

Today, Arguineguín wants to rebrand itself as a “port of hope” as volunteers and Catholic charities work to help the migrants and refugees, who arrive in the islands aboard makeshift boats called “cayucos” and “pateras.”

Tito Villarmea, captain of the salvage boat Guardamar Urania, has reportedly saved more than 20,000 people as he patrols the ocean near the islands. Addressing the pope at the pier, he recalled saving a woman who cried desperately over the body of her teenage daughter, who had died on the journey.



“I wish we didn’t have to save anyone again,” he said. “Let’s work as a society to reduce this tragedy and build a more just world.”

In 2024, the Canaries received a record 46,843 migrants. Arrivals have declined in recent years after Spain and the European Union struck deals with Mauritania, Senegal and Morocco to intercept departures and increase patrols. The crossing has also grown proportionally deadlier, with a greater number of those attempting the journey perishing; last year, nearly 3,090 people died trying to reach Spain, through the Canary Islands or the Balearic route, and 1,300 have already died in the first six months of 2026, according to the Spanish nongovernmental organization Caminando Fronteras.

Just over 3,000 migrants have arrived to the islands this year, most from Senegal, Mali, Mauritania, Gambia and other regions of sub-Saharian Africa. Other immigrants arrive via air from Latin America, especially Venezuela and Cuba.

In his address, Leo called migrant deaths and exploitation a tragedy and said they “must serve as an appeal to the conscience of the nations of origin,” which have an obligation to provide the conditions for human flourishing. He also urged transit nations to protect the vulnerable from criminal networks and said the international community should promote cooperation.

The pope made an “appeal to the conscience of Europe, which cannot claim to uphold human dignity while growing accustomed to the Mediterranean and the Atlantic becoming unmarked graves.”

The EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, a new legal framework for how European countries manage immigration, takes effect Friday. Human-rights organizations warn that the pact, a set of 10 pieces of legislation adopted in 2024, opens the door for large deportation efforts to migrant camps in Africa. “We are worried because European politics is restrictive, it’s not aimed at building bridges but at building walls,” said the Rev. Fernando Redondo, who oversees the migration office of the Spanish bishops’ conference.



Critics have likened the policy to U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent limitation on green card applications, which must now be filed from outside the U.S.

Ahead of the implementation of the EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, Spain granted one year of legal status to immigrants lacking authorization, benefiting potentially 500,000 migrants living in the country. In January, when the initiative was announced, Spanish Minister of Migration Elma Saiz told journalists the government is ”dignifying and recognizing people who are already in our country.”



Migrants crowd a wooden boat as they sail to the port in La Restinga on the Canary island of El Hierro, Spain, Sunday, Aug. 18, 2024. The migrants sailed for seven days from the coast of Senegal. (AP Photo/Maria Ximena)

At the event, Leo addressed immigrants directly. “I want to bow before your dignity,” he said. “You are not just numbers or files. You are people who have left behind families and homes. You have dreams that no one has the right to despise.”

He told migrants they “have a right to be protected” and to not fall for the “siren songs” of those who want to exploit them. “They are industries of death,” he said.

The pope heard the testimony of Blessing, a victim of sexual trafficking, which was read by another woman to protect her identity. Born in Nigeria, Blessing sought to leave the abject conditions of her life. She said the mafia performed a “juju” ritual on her, commonly used in West Africa to bind and “curse” people into submission. After, they told her she had a 25,000 euro debt.

“So, my captivity began,” the testimony said, recounting years of abuse, violence and rape. She told of her journey to the Canaries, when one of her captors got her pregnant, later taking her child away and forced her into prostitution. She thanked the Catholic charities for freeing her from the cycle of violence she endured and for reuniting her with her son.

Catholic charities assist over 220,000 migrants in the Canaries, including more than 2,000 minors, according to the secretary-general of the local Caritas charity network. The local church also signed an agreement in 2023 of “Atlantic hospitality” to work together with African countries to help migrants.

Leo said that even though some put a price on the body of migrants, trap them in their past or treat them like objects, God sees their intrinsic humanity.

“Your life does not belong to those who harmed you; your body does not belong to those who took advantage of you; your days do not belong to those who wanted to chain you to fear,” he said. “Your life belongs to God, who has given you a dignity that cannot be taken from you. We want to walk with you until that truth feels stronger than the pain.”

Between 2024 and 2025, Spanish police uncovered a network responsible for trafficking minors in the Canary Islands, to bring them to France. And in 2021, more than 150 boat drivers were arrested in Gran Canary for smuggling, even though they are often migrants themselves and victims of human trafficking rings.

“Even today, monsters lurk in these seas: mafias that profit from despair, traffickers who enslave women and children, and those whose indifference allows the poor to be swallowed up by exploitation or forgetfulness,” Leo said. Repeatedly, the pope stated that the church and believers “cannot remain silent” before the suffering of immigrants and refugees.

“Every boat that arrives brings a question along with the migrants: What kind of world have we built, if so many brothers and sisters must risk death to seek life?” he said.

The pope questioned how people today will be judged by history for becoming accustomed to migrant suffering and death, an echo of his recent encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas” (Magnificent Humanity), where he stated that the treatment of migrants is a “litmus test” for democracies.

“Today, here by the sea, every individual that arrives asks us what remains of our humanity. Sooner or later, it will be known whether we protected life or whether we yielded to indifference,” he said.

Leo concluded the ceremony by throwing a wreath into the water to honor migrant deaths, followed by a moment of silent reflection.




























Opinion

What Pope Leo’s AI encyclical means for Catholic colleges and universities

(RNS) — Our institutions are at risk of becoming transactional degree factories where students become dehumanized.


(Photo by RDNE Stock Project/Pexels/Creative Commons)
Robert K. Vischer
June 10, 2026 

(RNS) — One of the greatest privileges I enjoy as a university president is looking directly into the eyes of new graduates as they cross the stage in our commencement ceremonies. This year had a twist: Given recent news stories about universities using artificial intelligence to announce graduates’ names, I made a point to reassure the audiences an actual human would do the honors. 

And at each ceremony, that announcement brought loud cheers.

Yes, we love our technology today, but we also still yearn for authentic human connection. If we don’t provide it, our institutions risk becoming transactional degree factories where students become dehumanized. 

The day after our final ceremony, Pope Leo XIV published his first encyclical, titled “Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.” This writing carries critical implications not just for Catholic higher education, but for all educators. While many of the insights are worth highlighting, Pope Leo could not have been clearer about the path forward: “Let us cultivate relationships.”

Colleges and universities must always strive to provide a return on investment for the thousands of students and families paying hard-earned money for a degree. But they must never lose sight that teaching students to cultivate relationships is the greatest value for taking those degrees and making a true difference in the world.

Universities are essential to avoiding the “Babel syndrome” referenced in the encyclical. That, of course, is a reference to the biblical story of the “Tower of Babel,” in which the people embarked on an ill-fated project to make a name for themselves by building a tower that would reach the heavens. The result was not unity, but confusion and separation. Leo calls on educators to not make the same mistake of believing a single, digital language (like AI) can “translate everything, including the mystery of the person, into data and performance.”

Pope Leo XIV attends the presentation of his first encyclical, “Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence,” at the Vatican, May 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)

For educators, this means we are obligated to pursue the integration of knowledge and equip our students with the ability to grasp complexity and the skills to verify facts. These are precisely the skills our graduates will need to ensure that the organizations for which they ultimately work (and eventually lead) bring benefit to the communities they aim to serve. Are we equipping our students with media literacy? And positioning them to build trust across our algorithm-driven silos? And helping them develop an ethical lens that will guide their deployment of new technologies?

Higher education, however, should always aim to provide more than knowledge and skills. That is why providing space for reflection, discernment and appreciation is just as critical as building skillsets and knowledge, as this is what allows them to find true direction in their lives. Are we offering them resources to build not just a good career, but a meaningful life? Can they identify the core purpose that drives them forward? Can they articulate why they matter in terms that are not contingent on their external achievements? Today’s graduates may not know exactly how their worlds will look 10 years from now given the magnitude of looming technological changes, but having that true direction can help them navigate those changes. As educators, that is how we can best prepare them to flourish. 

Yes, our institutions must teach students how to succeed in the emerging world of AI, but a core piece of that instruction means helping them understand that AI is not a substitute for human relationships. Pope Leo warns that as more emphasis is placed on “speed and fragmentation, the human person still yearns to receive care and recognition from attentive minds, kind words and hands capable of tenderness.”

And sometimes that tenderness comes from the simple act of reading a name. At my university, we like to say our professors know amazing things — like their students’ names. That amazing knowledge may be more important than ever in the new, uncertain AI era.

(Robert K. Vischer is president of the University of St. Thomas. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily reflect those of Religion News Service.)

MAGA erupts as Pope Leo meets with Bad Bunny


Super Bowl LX - Half-Time Show - New England Patriots v Seattle Seahawks - Levi's Stadium, Santa Clara, California, United States - February 8, 2026 Bad Bunny performs during the halftime show
 REUTERS Mike Blake
June 10, 2026
ALTERNET

The Vatican has confirmed that Puerto Rican singer, Bad Bunny, held a private audience with Pope Leo on June 8 at the Santiago Bernabéu stadium, and MAGA did not take the news well.

Rich Raho Teacher-Theology Department at DePaul College Prep of the Lake Chicago, made the announcement on X, saying the meeting took place after the pontiff's gathering with the Madrid Archdiocesan community. The Catholic News Agency similarly confirmed the meeting. But before the end of the day on June 9, MAGA posters were already slamming the meeting.

“Just wonderful, the Pope hanging out with a gang-banger,” claimed one MAGA critic, before his post was buried on X by angry hecklers.


“Wait til you find out who Jesus hung out with ... also Bad Bunny isn't a gang banger,” one X user retorted.

“Not a gang-banger, weirdo,” replied another.


“The Chicago democrat pope meets with anybody. He's wonderful,” insisted another on X.

“So Pope Leo would rather have a meeting with Bad Bunny who promotes degeneracy than visiting the African countries where Christians and Catholics are being murdered by Islamists? Ok. Got it,” yowled another critic.

But the pope has his own standing on X, and his fanbase immediately pounced.


“Such a stupid uninformed comment,” one of them barked in reply on X.

MAGA’s hostility toward Pope Leo stems from the one-sided rivalry President Donald Trump has imposed on the Vatican.

In April, Pope Leo XIV chronicler Christopher Hale said he had confirmed that Trump’s Pentagon threatened to declare war on the Vatican. In January, the White House issued a threat behind closed doors at the Pentagon, when Under Secretary of War for Policy Elbridge Colby summoned Cardinal Christophe Pierre — Pope Leo XIV’s then-ambassador to the United States — and delivered a lecture, said Hale.

“America has the military power to do whatever it wants in the world,” Colby and his associates informed the cardinal. “The Catholic Church had better take its side.”

As the room temperature rose, Hale said he confirmed that one U.S. official “reached for a fourteenth-century weapon and invoked the Avignon Papacy, the period when the French Crown used military force to bend the bishop of Rome to its will.”

Hale said the report confirmed that the Vatican had reason to decline the Trump-Vance White House’s invitation to host Pope Leo XIV for America’s 250th anniversary in 2026 two weeks after the confrontation.

But the pope remains a much more popular figure than the combative president, and columnists noted Trump appeared to go down in a bitter trample of screeching beneath the wheels of the papacy.
AMERIKAN PROTESTANTISM
Inside Trump Cabinet official’s ties to shadowy evangelical group

June 09, 2026
ALTERNET

President Donald Trump continues to draw a great deal of criticism on both the left and the right for picking Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director Bill Pulte for acting national intelligence director despite his lack of national security experience. But Trump considers Pulte a true MAGA loyalist. And according to Salon, he has another credential that makes him appealing to MAGA: his family's connection to The Family, a secretive Christian group that has been active in Washington, DC for 91 years.

Journalist Jonathan Larsen, in Salon, reports that Pulte's family "has had extensive ties over two generations to leaders and financial backers" of the Fellowship Foundation, AKA The Family — which "conducts shadow diplomacy around the world, according to public records and documents I obtained."

"Pulte's grandfather, at one point one of the wealthiest men in the world, built a Fortune 500 company and gave tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars to charity before his 2018 death," Larsen reports. "He was also friends with Doug Coe, died in 2017 after decades leading the secretive, controversial Fellowship Foundation that built and sustained a global right-wing network including dictators, lobbyists, and corrupt millionaires largely united against labor, LGBTQ+ and reproductive rights. Better known as The Family, The Fellowship runs the National Prayer Breakfast and the congressional residence on Capitol Hill called C Street."


The Family was formed in 1935 during the Great Depression by Abraham Vereide, a native of Norway. Democratic President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was serving his first term at the time, and The Family was decidedly opposed to FDR's New Deal. Although Vereide was a Methodist/Mainline Protestant minister, evangelicals have become increasingly prominent in The Family over the years.

Larsen notes that he "found no public indication that Pulte has direct, personal ties to The Fellowship," but members of his family clearly do.


"If Pulte is personally connected to The Fellowship," Larsen explains, "he'd hardly be alone in the administration's upper ranks. Secretary of State Marco Rubio used to live at the C Street townhouse, as did Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.). President Donald Trump's special envoy to the United Kingdom, former 'Apprentice' producer Mark Burnett, is a regular at The Fellowship's National Prayer Breakfast….

It's not surprising that the Pulte family, based in Michigan, has ties to Fellowship insiders and funders. The Fellowship has had a strong presence among Michigan's wealthy for decades…. But, especially in Pulte's new position, The Fellowship could be just a phone call away, given its intense focus on relationships with global leaders, and given Pulte’s ostensible closeness to his grandfather. The Fellowship already has a history of working with and inside the State Department."


Southern Baptists oppose amnesty, political violence, women pastors at annual meeting

(RNS) — In a departure from resolutions dating to 2006, the SBC’s new statement does not mention a path to legal status for immigrants.


Thousands of people attend the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting, Tuesday, June 9, 2026, at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Fla. (RNS photo/Marty Jean-Louis)

Adelle M. Banks
June 11, 2026 
RNS


(RNS) — Southern Baptists adopted a resolution on immigration at their annual meeting, affirming “love of neighbor” but also legal immigration enforcement.

The resolution, one of 11 nonbinding statements adopted that gave a sense of viewpoints of those gathered at the Southern Baptist Convention’s meeting in Orlando, Florida, was adopted after the denomination’s public policy arm broke ties with an evangelical immigration advocacy group last September.

“We reject amnesty, understood as forgiveness of legal violations without accountability,” read the denomination’s Wednesday (June 10) statement, which also disavowed “all ideologies or rhetoric that deny the equal worth and dignity of any people group regardless of immigration status.” It also affirmed “that Christian compassion and hospitality do not negate lawful order or excuse indifference to public justice and social peace.”

Before a vote, the statement prompted questions on the floor of the Orange County Convention Center, including from Kyle Stachewicz, lead pastor of a Reedsburg, Wisconsin, church. He said some of its language would convey to young adults carried across the border at a young age and later baptized in a Southern Baptist church “that we see no distinction between them and someone who willfully broke the law as an adult.”

He added: “I fear that not recognizing this will close doors to gospel ministry in immigrant communities at the exact moment that we are asking Southern Baptist churches to strengthen such ministry as this resolution calls us to do.”

In a departure from past resolutions dating back to 2006, the new statement, which was presented by the SBC resolutions committee, does not mention a path to legal status for immigrants

RELATED: Willy Rice, Florida pastor and abuse crisis skeptic, elected SBC president


“One of the tremendous problems is that the system’s been overwhelmed by just the sheer number of people who have come over,” Hunter Baker, chair of the committee, said at a news conference after the resolutions were considered. “You don’t have an adequate judicial apparatus or regulatory apparatus to give everybody due process.”

As a result, he said, immigrants are left not knowing where they stand.

The slate of resolutions, most of which were adopted on Wednesday, the second day of the two-day meeting, included one that adds to their yearslong discussion of women pastors.

Earlier in the day, messengers, or church delegates to the conference, adopted a measure called the Truth and Unity Amendment in a first step to have the SBC constitution bar churches that have women pastors or permit women to preach on Sunday mornings. The amendment was proposed by Al Mohler, president of the flagship Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.

The related resolution, titled “On the Office and Function of Pastor/Elder/Overseer,” states that the Southern Baptist messengers “reaffirm that the office of pastor/elder/overseer is limited to men as qualified by Scripture” and “affirm that the New Testament presents the pastoral office and the function of pastoral oversight of the church as inseparably connected.”

Al Mohler addresses the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting, Tuesday, June 9, 2026, in Orlando, Fla. (RNS photo/Marty Jean-Louis)

Citing confusion in some SBC congregations, it urged churches to not use the titles “pastor,” “overseer” and “elder” for nonpastoral offices and to “continue affirming and deploying women in biblically faithful ways.” The statement expressed gratitude for the “indispensable service” of women across Southern Baptist life, such as in missions work and evangelism.

The Baptists also condemned political violence, citing recent “assassinations and attempted assassinations of public figures, the harassment and even murder of fellow citizens in houses of worship, vandalism of crisis pregnancy centers, and public mayhem that sows chaos and destruction.”

William Wolfe, a messenger from a Fort Mill, South Carolina, church and executive director of the Center for Baptist Leadership, unsuccessfully sought to add wording to the resolution about Charlie Kirk, the evangelical Christian activist and co-founder of Turning Point USA who was assassinated last September.

“In 2018, the SBC passed a resolution specifically mentioning the assassination of MLK Jr., and if we can name MLK Jr., we can name Charlie Kirk,” said Wolfe, a former Trump administration official, in a reference to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

But the resolutions committee opposed Wolfe’s proposed amendment. During a press conference, committee member Ryan Helfenbein, who said he was a close friend of Kirk’s, said that the whole committee felt the loss of Kirk but wanted to address the bigger issue of political violence.

Members of the 2026 SBC Committee on Resolutions, including Jeremy Pierre, from left, Hunter Baker, Evan Lenow and Ryan Helfenbein, hold a press conference June 10, 2026, in Orlando, Fla. (RNS photo/Bob Smietana)

Baker echoed that sentiment, citing the assassination attempts that targeted President Donald Trump as well as the fatal ambush last year of Melissa Hortman, a Democratic state representative in Minnesota, along with the death of Kirk. “We wanted to capture the broader phenomenon,” he said.

The resolution called on Southern Baptists to analyze their public speech and online content, treat others as neighbors rather than enemies and reject the idea that their foremost identity is their political affiliation rather than their Christian commitment.

“We reject any claim that righteous ends justify unrighteous means,” it stated.

In a separate resolution, Southern Baptists reiterated that they “unequivocally condemn this new surge of antisemitism in all its forms, including violence, cultural hatred, and conspiracy theories of Jewish controlled cabals, as sinful, unchristian, and an assault on both biblical truth and basic human dignity.”

Pastor Stephen Feinstein of a Southern Baptist church in Hesperia, California, urged passage of the resolution on antisemitism.

“If you do not believe that antisemitism is rising in our society, you aren’t paying attention,” said Feinstein, whose church website describes him as a Christian convert who is the son of a Jewish father and a Roman Catholic mother. “My youngest daughter asked me if we could change her last name. My name is Feinstein. You shouldn’t have to have your daughter ask that kind of question.”

Messengers vote during the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting, Wednesday, June 10, 2026, at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Fla. (RNS photo/Bob Smietana)

Another resolution said that using digital technology for worship should not take the place of in-person services for all who are able. The statement, titled “On the Nature and Importance of the Physically Gathered Church in a Digital Age,” also affirmed in-person baptism and Communion rather than “virtual or digitally mediated substitutes.”

On Tuesday, the Southern Baptists approved a resolution about the 250th anniversary of the country and religious liberty, acknowledging “sins such as slavery, racism, abortion, injustice, and sexual immorality” in the country’s history. It noted that despite failings the country had ended slavery within its borders and defended freedom from threats of communism abroad.

They added: “we call upon Southern Baptists to pursue national renewal through biblically informed civic engagement, including advocating for just laws that are rooted in God’s natural law and consistent with the witness of holy Scripture, and electing public officials who will do the same.”

Another adopted resolution expressed appreciation for bivocational and volunteer pastors who work in other jobs while serving local congregations. Yet another encouraged all Southern Baptist congregations to expand their inclusion of children and adults with disabilities, including identifying barriers to physical access to enable families to participate in church.

One measure reaffirmed their opposition to assisted suicide, as more states have legalized the practice, and urged policymakers and medical practitioners to prioritize care such as hospice, palliative support and effective pain management.

And a resolution, passed in light of attention given to pastors and other ministry leaders embroiled in scandal, expressed gratitude for those who “labored faithfully over many years and finished well, keeping the faith and maintaining a testimony above reproach to the end.”

RNS national reporter Bob Smietana contributed to this report.