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Clergy Call 2009 Transcript: Father Richard Estrada

Clergy Call for Justice and Equality

May 5, 2009

Good morning.  My name is Father Richard Estrada, and I come to you from Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church in the heart of Los Angeles’s immigrant community.   As a Claretian Missionary and Catholic priest working for over 30 years with immigrant families and homeless youth, I know the gnawing fear that haunts families, neighborhoods and whole communities when violence and discrimination go unaddressed.  I also know the healing power of compassion and justice.  I have seen a Honduran hurricane refugee become a youth counselor, a Guatemalan civil war refugee become a U.S. Army Military officer, a Mexican immigrant become a graduate student and an unemployed Latina transgender nurse organize transgender housecleaners to serve  the poor and elderly in Los Angeles.   These are just a few stories of individuals who found enough people in their lives willing to share the Good News--that it is the quality of our character, not where we come from, not who we love, and not how we identify, that defines us.  When we demonstrate the courage to say NO to bigotry and violence and YES to compassion and possibility we give a great gift and receive an even greater gift in return.  It is because I have seen the power of justice firsthand that I—a life time Roman Catholic and religious advocate for immigration reform—stand with my lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender brothers and sisters and the clergy that embrace them  to urge our lawmakers to support the Mathew Shepard hate crimes legislation and the Employment Non-Discrimination Act. 

In Leviticus we are told "the stranger who dwelleth with you shall be unto you as one born among you. Thou shalt love him as thyself, for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt."  A stranger can come from a different land or can be anyone who seems different than us.  Just as the plight of Latino immigrants perishing from thirst and the threat of violence on our nation’s borders hurts those of us living in comfort, the threat of violence and job insecurity suffered by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people hurts us all. When Gwen Amber Rose Araujo, a Latina transgender woman is brutally murdered in Newark, California by men who could not accept her changed gender, none of us can feel secure.  When Jose and Romel Sucuzhanay are attacked by a man with a bat because they are Latino and perceived as gay, none of us can feel safe.   And when a person can be fired in 30 states for being gay or lesbian and in 38 states for being transgender, no one is free from the threat of job discrimination.  For, as the sacred text reminds us, we are all “strangers in the land of Egypt.” 

Today I call on our elected officials to stand with us to create a new day where we are all free from violence and discrimination.  Passing the Mathew Shepard Act and the Employment Non Discrimination Act will help us to build such a community.  Thank you. 

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