Photo courtesy of Luisa Arumi Ortiz
A Lynch School of Education and Human Development class of 12 Catholic educators and Boston College graduate students ventured to El Paso, Tex., and Juarez, Mexico, in February for an encounter with the sub-layers of the religious, social, political, ideological, and economic factors of immigration, and to experience life on the southern borderāa journey that has altered the trajectory of their lives and work. Ģż
Led by Melodie Wyttenbach, executive director of 51²č¹Żās Barbara and Patrick Roche Center for Catholic Education, and Roche Center graduate assistant Mike Warner, a M.Div. candidate, the contingent spent a five-day immersionāthe crucial element of an el encuentro, or encounterāsandwiched between on-campus meetings that each featured relevant guest speakers.
During their trip to El Paso, the group stayed at the Missionary Society of St. Columbanās Mission Center; met with the U.S. Border Patrol, the Diocesan Migrant and Refugee Services, and Jesuit Refugee Service; served meals to more than 550 migrants at Sacred Heart Jesuit Parish; and discussed the realities of educating culturally diverse communities with local school administrators, teachers, and parents. In Juarez, they visited shelters and met with religious and lay ministers who have been grappling with the challenges of immigration for decades.
Melodie Wyttenbach
āThis course provides students with the opportunity to examine the contexts and realities of global and United States immigration through the lens of Catholic teaching and tradition,ā said Wyttenbach. āUsing Catholic social ethics and the multiple, rich and varied experiences of el encuentro, the class challenges students to critically evaluate their understanding of immigration in light of their roles as educators and administrators in Catholic schools.ā
The genesis of the class stems from āCatholic Schools in an Increasingly Hispanic Church,ā a report co-published in 2017 by School of Theology and Ministry Associate Professor Hosffman Ospino and Patricia Weitzel-OāNeill, then the Roche Center executive director, based on the first National Survey of Catholic Schools Serving Hispanic Families. Its core question centered on how Catholic schools should respond to demographic changes and the challenge of educating the next generation of American Catholics.
Emanating from that query, the Lynch School launched the one-credit course titled El Encuentro: Immigration and the Catholic Educatorās Response in 2020, designed for elementary and secondary Catholic school educators, as well as for graduate students in theology and education.
Students explore topics such as the history of global and U.S. immigration; the political, economic, and social causes of immigration and the role and response of Catholic schools; the journey of the migrant; ways to make the classroom, pedagogy, and school more culturally responsive; and how to personally address the question of being called to live a life of service as a faith response to justice.
“ I was struck by the question of how, as educators, can we adjust to better serve immigrant children and their families? What should we be doing to ābuildā culturally sustaining schools, to address the trauma that results from immigration?ā ”
Erin Flanagan M.Ed. ā22, a third-grade teacher at Brightonās Saint Columbkille Partnership School and a member of the Urban Catholic Teachers Corps 2020-2021 cohort, described her encuentro as āeye opening.ā
She explained, āThis experience has greatly impacted how I will interact with immigrant individuals and how I will form my teaching pedagogies moving forward. In Juarez, we visited a Catholic school for students with disabilitiesāan area Iām passionate about and that Mexican public schools tend to not be supportive ofāand it showed me a spark of hope, even among all of the challenges weāve witnessed. I left inspired.ā
For Elizabeth Looney M.Ed. ā16, principal at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Mission Grammar School in Roxbury, Mass., her participation in the class and trip was spurred by the desire to inform herself about āa walk of lifeā that she had not experienced personally.
āAs an educator, I make decisions every day that impact students and families, and I recognize that I canāt make informed and equitable decisions if I donāt have information about lived experiences outside of my own,ā she said. ĢżāPeople are migrating to the U.S. to escape danger and violence in their home countries but the process of this migration is perpetuating trauma and has been for generations. I need to find ways to support students whose childhood has had elements of this trauma; itās not fixable but it is supportable.ā
Campus Ministry graduate assistant Luis Melgar M.Div. ā23 shared a story of Betty Campbell, an elderly Sister of Mercy he met in Juarez, who has turned her passion toward preserving the names of the countless migrants who have been trafficked, abused, and victimized by the cartels, to ensure that they are recognized as people and not just statistics.
āThey are people, people with lives, stories, and families, who have experienced so much trauma and anguish in their pursuit for a better life,ā he said. āSister Betty lives her life by retelling these stories for folks who are unable to tell them anymore, to keep their memory alive, and to share how the violence and the U.S. policy are really affecting the Juarez community and communities beyond.ā
Brazilian native Mariana Lima Becker Ph.D. ā23, a past participant who addressed the class just prior to their departure, characterized her own border experience as ātransformative.ā
ĢżāI was struck by the question of how, as educators, can we adjust to better serve immigrant children and their families?ā she said. ĢżāWhat should we be doing to ābuildā culturally sustaining schools, to address the trauma that results from immigration?ā
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Phil Gloudemans | University Communications | March 2022

