Title, Chapter
1 I | colonies in those far distant lands. It was these priests who
2 I | riches acquired in the new lands. These priests also wished
3 I | up residence in foreign lands."~Then, aided by energetic
4 I | had emigrated to distant lands, such as North and South
5 I | emigrating from Europe to distant lands, were contracting marriage
6 I | who had emigrated to other lands. Young priests from the
7 I | were established in foreign lands to provide timely and secure
8 I | misfortunes of war, to seek other lands to obtain the essentials
9 I | Catholics emigrating to foreign lands. Pius XI rightly praised
10 I | recognized in their new home lands.~He gave the direction of
11 I | tendency to occupy foreign lands, and for reliance on might
12 I | to seek refuge in other lands. Hence, we decided to establish
13 I | great deserts and traceless lands, is not, at the same time,
14 I | homes and live in foreign lands.~The natural law itself,
15 I | populations to migrate into other lands, deporting inhabitants against
16 I | those in need, whose own lands lack the necessities of
17 I | were far from their native lands, they could resume in foreign
18 I | exiled back to their own lands and to obtain freedom for
19 I | migrate to hospitable foreign lands; to receive cordially those
20 I | carried far from their native lands may return to their own
21 II, I | Mediterranean regions to other lands overseas. This applies regardless
22 II, VI| Italian migrants in foreign lands. Since this function is
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