Editorial
Migration and assimilation
After centuries of being a poor
country, Ireland has become one of
the most prosperous nations in the
world.
One result is that Ireland, which had
experienced severe emigration ever
since the potato famine began in 1845,
is now receiving many immigrants. It’s
welcoming them, too, because Ireland
needs the workers.
When this writer was in Dublin last
year, all the waiters and waitresses at
the restaurant at our hotel were
Orientals. Ethnic restaurants have
popped up in Ireland’s larger cities.
While this is happening in Ireland,
Poland is experiencing the opposite
problem. Unemployment in Poland has
reached 18 percent. Consequently, since
May 2004, nearly 2 million young
Polish men and women have emigrated
from Poland.
Where are they going? Half of them now live in Ireland and
Britain.
All this has created problems in
Ireland that the United States has
always faced—how to assimilate the
newcomers into the country’s culture.
The Church is involved in Ireland since
most of those Polish immigrants are
Catholics, and they would like to have
Mass in their language—at least until
they learn English.
We hope that the Church in Ireland
will be as successful as the Church in
the United States has been with its
immigrants.
Granted, there were
difficult periods in our history when
various ethnic groups that couldn’t
speak English came into conflict with
bishops and priests, mainly Irish who
already spoke English who objected to
having to offer Mass in German, Italian
or Polish. But there was a gradual
assimilation over several generations.
Anyone who has ever tried to learn a
new language as an adult knows how
difficult it is. That’s why the Church
tries to provide Masses and other
services in the language of the
newcomer.
But usually the second
generation of immigrants is bilingual,
speaking their parents’ language at
home and English outside the home. By
the time the third generation comes
along, they might or might not know
enough of the original language to
speak to their grandparents.
Immigrants realize the necessity of
learning English. A survey released by
the Pew Hispanic Center on June 7
showed that 57 percent of Latino
immigrants feel it is necessary to learn
English, and 96 percent of foreign-born
Latinos believe it is very important that
the children of immigrants be taught
English.
If there had been surveys of the
French, Germans or Italians who
comprised much of our earlier foreign speaking
immigrants, we feel sure the
percentages would have been similar.
Our Church in Indiana was heavily
dependent on foreign-speaking
immigrants. Our first four ishops came
from France, as did Blessed Mother
Theodore Guérin and the first Sisters of
Providence of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods. So did Father Edward Sorin,
who founded the University of Notre
Dame. They all experienced great
difficulty in learning English since they
were learning it as adults.
German Catholics were prevalent in
several sections of the state, both north
and south. Often, the Irish objected to
the fact that sermons in their churches
were in German (the Masses
themselves, of course, were in Latin).
Ethnic parishes were common. St. Patrick Parish in Indianapolis was
originally for the Irish; today, it’s
mainly Latino. Our Lady of the Most
Holy Rosary Parish in Indianapolis was
Italian, a fact that it celebrates each year
with its Italian Festival.
Eventually, of course, the parishioners
of those ethnic parishes learned
to speak English. The same thing will
happen with most of the Latino parishioners
in our parishes today.
Ireland has another problem when
it comes to immigration and assimilation.
As is true in other European
countries, Muslims are the fastest
growing immigrants in Ireland today.
As France, England, Germany and
other countries are learning, many of
these Muslims have no intention of
assimilating. As the dominant culture
of Europe has become secular rather
than Christian-based, and as the
Muslim population continues to grow
at a much higher rate than non-
Muslims, there is a real threat that
Muslims will become dominant
throughout Europe.
That doesn’t seem to be a threat here
in the United States where even most
Muslims assimilate into our culture. Of
course, here, most of our immigrants
are Latinos, most of whom, according
to surveys, do assimilate.
— John F. Fink