🚨 Pope Leo XIV has sent a WARNING to migrants, telling them how to behave when they arrive into new countries:
'Learn its language, to respect its laws, to get to know its customs, to participate in communal life and to offer your gifts with gratitude'
@Rainmaker1973 Holy Ghost free my heart and mind from the negative and false thought-patterns and feelings that are choking my very soul.
…Blood of Christ protect me
Iran, which shares a 570-mile (920-kilometer) border with Afghanistan and has hosted millions of Afghan refugees for decades, has also come under criticism for its treatment of Afghans, particularly for intensifying its recent deportation campaign through which Iran has returned or expelled more than 1.5 million Afghans, many of them involuntarily.
The expulsions have drawn concern from the U.N. and human rights groups, which warn that families, including women and girls, are being sent back to a country facing severe humanitarian and economic crises under Taliban rule, where girls are barred from secondary and higher education and women face sweeping restrictions on work and public life.
Iran argues that the policy is aimed at addressing undocumented migration, economic pressures, and security concerns, arguing that the large-scale presence of unauthorized migrants has strained public services and labor markets.
🇮🇷 🇦🇫 Iran, which has been criticized by western governments for its compulsory hijab laws and the enforcement of dress codes by its morality police, has repeatedly condemned the Taliban’s restrictions on women and girls, including at the United Nations.
Speaking at a U.N. Security Council meeting in Monday, June 8, Iran’s ambassador, Amir-Saeid Iravani, called on Afghanistan’s de facto authorities to remove restrictions on women and girls and ensure their rights to education and employment. He called Taliban’s measures “incompatible with the true teachings of Islam.”
“An estimated 3.8 million girls between seven and 18 years of age are not in school, including more than 2.6 million adolescent girls,” a U.N. representative to Afghanistan said this week. “Each year, approximately 250,000 more girls are permanently excluded from secondary education pathways, creating a lost generation of talent and potential.”
The contrast is notable: Iran’s female literacy rate has risen from roughly 28% in 1976 to more than 85% today under its revolutionary government, nearly closing the gender gap. Women account for about 54-60% of university students in the country.
The U.S. bishops are consecrating the nation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus today. Unite yourself with Catholics around the country taking part. Livestream at 4 pm ET.
https://t.co/WNLOMcKU6b
@Riley_Gaines_ Oh she knew she was being touched there …. Her face says it all. I would be infuriated. And then on top of that it making her high school experience more miserable with other students. Poor thing