Weeks before a historic first trip to the United States, Pope Francis called on the religious communities of Europe to address the region’s spiraling migrant crisis, sheltering at least one war-weary family in every parish, convent and monastery on the continent.
More than 365,000 migrants have already crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Europe this year, according to the United Nations. About 2,800 of those are dead or missing and millions more are languishing in camps in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Libya, and Hungary. Most have fled ISIS in Iraq, civil war in Syria and smoldering conflicts in Afghanistan.
But while European governments have begun to open their borders, the United States has accepted a scant 1,500 Syrian refugees since 2011. By contrast, the influx into Germany has reached record levels in recent days, with about 8,000 refugees pouring into Munich on Saturday, and another 8,000 expected to arrive on Sunday.
Related: Still no end to migrant crisis in Europe
By midday Sunday, Austria had also reported a surge: 11,000 new migrants, according to the country’s Interior Ministry. The Italian coast guard, meanwhile, said it had coordinated the rescue of 329 migrants who ran into trouble while trying to cross the sea in rubber boats.
It’s not enough to say “Have courage, hang in there,” Francis told a crowd of thousands in St. Peter’s Square. He implored every religious community in Europe to make a “concrete” difference in the crisis, and pledged that the Vatican itself would take in two families “fleeing death by war and hunger.”
“The Gospel calls us to be neighbors to the smallest and most abandoned, to give them concrete hope,” he said, as the crowd cheered. Francis, who is himself descended from Italian migrants to Argentina, cited Mother Teresa and added: “May every parish, every religious community, every monastery, every sanctuary in Europe host a family, starting with my diocese of Rome.”
Francis did not mention the United States, but a few days earlier aid groups and at least 14 senators renewed their earlier calls on the Obama administration to do more. The groups want the U.S. to take in at least 65,000 Syrian refugees by the end of 2016. By comparison, Europe is expected to take in at least 150,000 under a plan proposed by the president of the European Commission. And Germany alone may take in as many as 800,000, according to chancellor Angela Merkel.








