Priests reflect on becoming citizens
ATLANTA, Ga. (The Georgia Bulletin) - July 4, 2000, was an auspicious date for Msgr. Luis Zarama. It was the birthday of America - and the day he swore allegiance to his adopted country.
The native-born Colombian, and now vicar general of the Archdiocese of Atlanta, had been in the United States for nine years, and the significance of becoming a citizen on Independence Day was not lost on him.
“I’m happy here, I choose to be here, and I feel like I’m part of the system as a citizen,” he said. “As a citizen, you are part of the country, and you have the right to exercise your freedoms - to vote and do your part - and I think if you are not a citizen, you don’t have that right. How can you criticize the U.S. and give your opinions if you aren’t a citizen?”
Later that same year, Msgr. Zarama did exercise his freedom to vote in the presidential election - and he stood in a long line to do so.
“I remember I had to wait for an hour and a half the first time I voted here,” he said.
It’s a privilege he doesn’t take for granted.
“I am very lucky; it’s not easy today (to become a U.S. citizen) especially right now. But I think it’s up to the person who is living here to make their own petition to become a citizen or not.”
Growing up in Ireland, Father Frank McNamee always saw America as a symbol of freedom, he said. The pastor of St. Peter Chanel Church in Roswell, Ga., reflected on the similar histories of his homeland and his adopted country. He recently noted his one-year anniversary of becoming a U.S. citizen.
“In Ireland, we fought for the right to religion and for Catholics to own their own land - and people sacrificed their lives for that,” he said. He saw that same hunger for freedom in America’s history.
While information about the branches of the U.S. government and names of presidents are part of the basic “test” to become a U.S. citizen, Father McNamee was amused by one question in particular.
“I had to answer - what is July 4 for?”
“I think the guy who tested me was Catholic - there was a calendar of the Monastery of the Holy Spirit on his wall,” he said with a laugh. His answer?
“Independence.”
Although he still visits relatives in Galway, Ireland, Father McNamee said his U.S. citizenship makes it much easier for him to pass through immigration. But he’s not staying overseas too long.
“Georgia is my home, Atlanta is my home - I’m not going to retire in Ireland,” he said. “I appreciate the freedom of this country. America has a short history (in comparison to Ireland’s), but they have sacrificed much for their freedom.”
One of the newest U.S. citizens is Father Jose Duvan Gonzalez. A native of Colombia and resident of the United States for the past 11 years, Father Duvan, who is vicar for clergy and the director of Hispanic ministry, officially became a citizen on May 18.
“The process was smooth and quick; I was a little nervous because of the language,” he wrote in an e-mail. During the process of becoming a citizen he “learned more about the history of the country.”
“My favorite thing about being here is how it has enriched my life; now I have a better understanding of my Anglo brothers and sisters and also other cultures of the world,” he said.
“What motivated me to become a citizen was the reality of the migrants here; I see the opportunity in the future to vote for a better legislation.”
He also noted that “from my perspective, residents born in the U.S. … take for granted that everybody has the same way of life, and they don’t know all the need and suffering that there (is) in the surrounding countries. They should be feeling blessed of being born here and open their hearts to their brothers and sisters in need.”
Ellis Island and the Statue of Liberty were the first reminders of freedom in this country for Father Paul Burke. The native of Galway, Ireland, is in the process of obtaining his U.S. citizenship.
“I had spent my first summer in the U.S. in New York with my cousin and her husband,” Father Burke recalled. “That was 1990. My first Fourth of July we spent the day at Ellis Island. That was before they put the Heritage Center up there, and I was looking at it the way many Irish would have come in, and what they would have seen (of America) for the first time. My guess was it wasn’t the way it is now. They had quarantines and looking at their experience that way, my own experience (becoming a citizen) has been relatively without hardship,” he said.
While he experienced the icons of America’s freedom in New York, it has been his time in Washington, D.C., studying in a summer canon law program at Catholic University, that motivated him to become a citizen.
“To see the Capitol and the White House and everything that goes along with it, you can’t be in Washington without having some sense of national pride. We would go for walks around the monuments in the evenings; they inspired me,” he said.
Now he must wait.
After having temporary visas for almost 16 years both as a student and as a “religious worker,” which is the designation that priests have, he spent the five years necessary with his green card status before applying for citizenship this summer. He plans to take the required tests this November.“By next July 4, I’ll be a citizen,” he said.
He hopes to spend it back in Washington to watch the nation’s birthday celebrated with fireworks on the Mall. That’s an experience that is quintessentially American.
“There’s something there that’s even more than the impressive fireworks; it’s the reaction of people. There’s so many people crowded onto the Mall. It’s very much a United Nations, and they all have this same sense of national pride.”
- - -
This story was made available to Catholic Online by permission of The Georgia Bulletin(www.georgiabulletin.org), official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Atlanta, Ga.
Keywords:
NEWSLETTERS »
Rate This Article
1 - 1 of 1 Comments
Leave a Comment
More Diocese News
- Newman Centers are anchor of faith at public colleges
- A Pinprick to Revive Devotion
- Family celebration: Utah women travel to India to meet with sponsored children
- Deportation of Wis. eighth-grader reveals immigration policy's painful side to class
- Mandatory drug testing to be implemented in Oklahoma City Catholic high schools
- Catechesis of the Good Shepherd ‘hands-on’ religious education gets a look in Texas
- Food versus fuel: Is biofuel production to blame for our present food shortage?
- Spirituality key to the dying patient’s ‘quality of life,’ says Catholic doctor
- Bioethics battle is between contrary visions of the human person, says Rome professor
Featured News
- Fr. Paul Schenck: Finding Living Faith on Catechetical Sunday
- The Movie Yellow: Incest as 'Normal' and Cassavates's Slides Into the World of Woes
- The Chicago School Teachers Strike Reveals the Need For School Choice
- The Sexual Barbarians and the Dissolution of Culture
- The Happy Priest Challenges Us to Ask: Who is Jesus to Me?
- Michael Coren on Canadian Public Schools: Teachers, leave those kids alone
- We Cannot Ignore Our Consciences: Cardinal Dolan On Religious Liberty
- In the Face of Danger, Successor of Peter Travels to Lebanon as a Messenger of Peace
- Reflections on the Dignity and Vocation of Women: Who or What?
Most Popular
Editorial: Is the Scandal Ridden Obama Administration Becoming a House of Cards? Read More
Did God make junk? Scientists say 98 percent of human genome is junk Read More
There's the problem! Americans are out of touch with scientific consensus on climate change Read More
Courageous Cardinal Seán Patrick O'Malley Will Not Attend Boston College Commencement Read More
Sex In Uniform: Why the Increase in Sexual Assaults in the Military? Read More
Daily Readings
Reading 1, Acts 28:16-20, 30-31
On our arrival in Rome Paul was allowed to stay in lodgings of ... Read More
Psalm, Psalms 11:4, 5, 7
Yahweh in his holy temple! Yahweh, his throne is in heaven; his ... Read More
Gospel, John 21:20-25
Peter turned and saw the disciple whom Jesus loved following ... Read More
Saint of the Day
St. Pope John I
May 18: St. John I, Pope and Martyr (Feast day - May 18) A native of ... Read More
Latest Videos
Pope to Pontifical Missionary Works: Your work is still relevant View Video
Pope rails against dictatorship of the economy View Video
May Crowning of the Virgin Mary - St Philip The Apostle Catholic Church View Video
St Thomas Aquinas Catholic School Visit to Ogwen Cottage May 2013 View Video
May 17 - Homily: St. Paschal, Profound Love For The Eucharist View Video
Marketplace
THE DEVIL’S DICTIONARY for an Ungodly Age Read More
The Rock of Truth DVD
The Rock of Truth DVD: Story of a man who in his younger days was a ... Read More



















How can a priest take the oath of citizenship when he accepts God as his lord and master above all others?