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Border Report – El Paso bishop brings Pope Leo XIV desperate letters from migrants in crosshairs of US crackdown

Posted on October 8, 2025

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Texas bishop on the front lines of the U.S. immigration crackdown met Wednesday with Pope Leo XIV, bringing him a packet of letters from immigrant families “terrorized” by fear that they and their loved ones will be rounded up and deported as the Trump administration’s tactics grow increasingly combative.

El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz also showed Leo a video detailing the plight of migrants, and told The Associated Press afterward that Leo vowed to “stand with” them and the Catholic leaders who are trying to help them.

“He had a few words for us, thanking us for our commitment to the immigrant peoples and also saying that he hopes that the bishops’ conference will speak to this issue,” said Seitz, chair of the migration committee of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Catholic leaders in the U.S. have denounced the Trump administration’s crackdown, which has split up families, incited fears and upended life in American churches and schools that serve migrant communities. The administration has defended the crackdown as safeguarding public safety and national security.

Catholic Diocese of El Paso Bishop Mark Seitz, right, and El Paso Auxiliary Bishop Anthony Celino left, meet with Pope Leo on Oct. 8, 2025, at the Vatican. (AP Photo/Silvia Stellacci)

“We don’t want to get into the political fray, we’re not politicians, but we need to teach the faith,” and especially the Gospel message recognizing the inherent dignity of all God’s children, and to care for the poor and welcome the stranger, Seitz said.

“They’re terrorized. And it is a fear that has a long-term impact on people, on their lives,” he said.

The letters and video Seitz brought to Leo detail the fear that even legal migrants are facing every day. U.S. citizens, immigrants with legal status and children have been among those detained in increasingly brazen and aggressive encounters by federal agents. In Leo’s hometown of Chicago, immigration agents have stormed apartment complexes by helicopter as families slept, deployed chemical agents near a public school and put handcuffs on a city official at a hospital.

“They can’t go out. They are afraid to shop, to go to church and so they stay home,” wrote Maria in one of the letters delivered to Leo. Originally from Guatemala, she has lived in San Francisco for a quarter-century and qualified for asylum years ago, but has relatives in the U.S. who are not legal.

  • During a private audience at the Vatican today, the Hope Border Institute and Bishop Mark J. Seitz presented Pope Leo XIV with messages from members of the immigrant community in the United States.

“The pope needs to talk to Trump and ask Trump to think about what he’s doing to immigrants,” she wrote. “The pope needs to plead with Trump and Trump needs to listen to him. Trump has to change what he’s doing.”

Just before he died, Pope Francis strongly rebuked the Trump administration’s plans for mass deportations, warning that the forceful removal of people purely because of their illegal status deprives them of their inherent dignity.

History’s first U.S. pope has followed in Francis’ line. Last weekend, Leo celebrated a special Holy Year Mass for migrants, denouncing the “coldness of indifference” and the “stigma of discrimination” that migrants desperate to flee violence and suffering often face. Asked by reporters this week about the crackdown in Chicago, Leo declined to comment.

On Wednesday, Leo was running late for the audience with Seitz and the delegation of around a dozen people, including members of the Hope Border Institute, an advocacy group formed in partnership with the El Paso diocese. The delegation members assured Leo that they would stand with him as they chatted in a Vatican reception room.

“Later on in the meeting he said, ‘I will stand with you,’ so it was a beautiful little exchange,” said Seitz.

Hope Border Institute, Bishop Seitz present messages from immigrant community in the United States to Pope Leo XIV in private audience

“We are grateful for the support of Pope Leo and the Catholic Church during this challenging moment when so many families across the United States are fearful of deportation and we are at risk of being separated from loved ones. The pope encouraged us to continue working for a world where the right of everyone to participate and contribute to building healthy and thriving communities is respected and protected.” — Lorena Andrade, executive director of La Mujer Obrera

“During our meeting with the Holy Father, we were able to share both the pain of those
experiencing the fear of deportation and family separation as well as the hopes and dreams of
immigrant families across the country. Pope Leo’s commitment to the human dignity of everyone who had made the migrant journey, and to defending the human rights of those who migrate, was clear and unequivocal. The pope reminded us that even in a moment of darkness and division in our country, migration continues to be a source of hope, and that Catholics are called to work for reconciliation by building welcoming communities.”
— Dylan Corbett, executive director of the Hope Border Institute

“In our meeting with Pope Leo Today, we were able to bear witness to the injustices and abuses facing our migrant sisters and brothers as well as the powerful contributions immigrants continue to make to our country. The Holy Father received the messages and testimonies of migrants in our country attentively, with compassion and concern. We are grateful to Pope Leo for his support for the work of all of us who are working for justice for immigrants in the United States and a more just world.” — Bishop Mark J. Seitz, Catholic Diocese of El Paso

There are rumors in the Vatican that the pope may be considering a trip to the United States as early as next year, when the United States celebrates the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Trump has invited him.

Francis famously celebrated Mass on the Mexican side of the U.S.-Mexico border in 2016, in Ciudad Juarez, with the liturgy beamed live into a stadium across the border in El Paso.

Seitz was noncommittal when asked if Leo might visit the U.S. side of the border.

“Well, you know he’d be welcome,” he said.

___

This version corrects that the Chicago city official was handcuffed, but not arrested at a hospital.

___

Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

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