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How Pope Leo reacted to migrant Filipino woman’s story in Lebanon


Loren Capobres greets Pope Leo XIV at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa on Dec. 1, 2025. (Vatican Media via CBCP News)

Posted by ReyFort Media

Pope Leo XIV on Monday said migrants’ experiences must push Christians to oppose war and build communities where no one seeking safety feels unwelcome, after hearing a Filipino woman’s testimony.

Loren Capobres, a former Filipino domestic worker in Lebanon who now works with Jesuit Refugee Service, shared stories that illustrate both the human cost of conflict and the Church’s moral responsibility.

Capobres described her work with migrants through Couples for Christ Lebanon, the Arrupe Migrant Center, and St. Joseph’s Tabaris Parish, which she calls her second home.

She said the parish, supported by Jesuit Refugee Service, became a shelter for migrants who lost homes, work, and security during fighting.

Capobres recounted the story of James and Lella, a Sudanese couple locked in their employer’s home as bombs fell, then abandoned when the employer fled.

The couple escaped and walked three days with their newborn and young son to reach the church. “In their courage, I saw God’s light,” she said.

Pope Leo said their suffering “touches us profoundly” and shows how war destroys innocent lives, adding that such stories call believers to act with compassion and courage.

“Their experiences invite us to take a stand to ensure that no one else will have to flee from his or her country due to senseless and cruel conflicts,” he said during a meeting with bishops, priests, consecrated persons, and pastoral workers at the Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon in Harissa.

“And that whoever knocks at the doors of our communities may never feel rejected, but welcomed with the words that Loren herself stated: ‘Welcome home!’” the pope added.

He praised migrants’ courage, saying it “speaks to us of God’s light” even in suffering, and cited Pope Francis in warning against indifference to the plight of displaced people.

Capobres told the pope that migrants “are not just workers,” but contributors who care for families, support parishes, and “carry hope” despite hardship.

She thanked God for allowing her to serve “the lost and the broken,” saying that small acts of love from the Church continue to change migrants’ lives.

Pope Leo said Capobres’ witness shows how the Church can remain a place of safety, welcome and belonging for people forced far from home by violence and fear. (Roy Lagarde via CBCP News)

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