Each year around St. Patrick’s Day, parishes across the United States
fill with green vestments and prayers of gratitude for the witness of
St. Patrick, a missionary who crossed borders, carried faith across
cultures and helped shape the church we know today.
It is a joyful feast. But it is also, if we allow it to be, a mirror.
As the proud daughter of Irish immigrants, I grew up with stories of
sacrifice, resilience and hope. Like so many who came before them, my
parents arrived seeking opportunity, safety and the freedom to build a
life rooted in dignity. They were welcomed by a church that spoke their
language. It nourished their faith and helped them find community in a
new land.
The Irish immigrant experience is now woven into the fabric of
American Catholicism. Yet we would do well to remember that Irish
immigrants were not always welcomed. They faced suspicion and open
hostility. Newspapers mocked them, and powerful voices insisted they did not belong. Yet they carried on, held steady by faith and by the quiet certainty that they, too, belonged to the American story.