Good Things Still Happen
In good times and bad it is encouraging and comforting to remember that good works are going on all around us. People are reaching out to each other and these works sometimes get noticed and sometimes do not. Either way the kingdom is built up one work at a time one hand at a time. So from the corner of the kingdom known as San Diego a story from the US Catholic Bishops site.
In good times and bad it is encouraging and comforting to remember that good works are going on all around us. People are reaching out to each other and these works sometimes get noticed and sometimes do not. Either way the kingdom is built up one work at a time one hand at a time. So from the corner of the kingdom known as San Diego a story from the US Catholic Bishops site.
USCCB
November 7, 2011
November 7, 2011
WASHINGTON—
Rosibel “Rosy” Mancillas Lopez, a law student and advocate for
immigration reform from San Diego, is the recipient of the 2011 Cardinal
Bernardin New Leadership Award. The award is sponsored by the Catholic
Campaign for Human Development (CCHD), the anti-poverty program of the
U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).
Mancillas
Lopez, 24, will be honored for her work on behalf of immigrants at a
reception Monday, November 14, during the U.S. bishops’ Fall General
Assembly in Baltimore. Rosy became involved in immigrant advocacy work
through a Catholic parish’s involvement with the San Diego Organizing
Project (SDOP), a CCHD-funded group, to empower immigrants to know their
rights. Rosy also leads delegations across the Mexican border,
volunteers to provide legal advice to immigrants, and advocates to
improve laws that affect immigrants. Her work with immigrant families
and her family’s own experiences inspired her to pursue a law degree.
“Rosy
draws on her faith and her family’s experience as Mexican immigrants to
stand up for the dignity, rights and lives of people who have no one
else to speak for them,” said Bishop Jaime Soto of Sacramento,
California, chairman of the USCCB’s CCHD Subcommittee. “Both our country
and the Church need more young people who are willing to take a stand
for the vulnerable and voiceless.”
“My
faith empowers me in all I do. It inspires me to work for love,
compassion and justice,” said Mancillas Lopez. “It’s humbling to have my
work singled out by the bishops for this award. I thank them for this
honor and for the care and concern they’ve shown for immigrants.”
Mancillas
Lopez is now studying at the University of San Diego Law School and
serves as an assistant in the university ministry office.
The
Cardinal Bernardin New Leadership Award honors a Catholic between the
ages of 18 and 30 who demonstrates leadership in fighting poverty and
injustice in the United States through community-based solutions. It is
named for the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, former archbishop of
Chicago and a leading voice on behalf of poor and low-income people, who
understood the need to build bridges across ethnic, economic, class and
age barriers.
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