POPE Francis has launched a two-year activism and awareness-raising campaign about the plight of migrants to counteract mounting anti-immigrant sentiment in the US, Europe and beyond.

The campaign encourages people to actually meet with migrants and listen to their stories, rather than treat them as statistics clouded by negative stereotypes.

Francis, the son of Italian immigrants to Argentina, launched the campaign during Wednesday’s weekly general audience, throwing his arms open to welcome the many refugees and asylum-seekers who filled St Peter’s Square.

He urged individuals and governments to welcome migrants with similarly open arms and share in their plight, as Jesus did.

He said migrants are driven by the very Christian virtue of hope, to find a better life, and said receiving countries should share in that hope by welcoming them and integrating them.

The church is undertaking the campaign amid a hardening of anti-immigrant sentiment in the West.

In German elections this week, anti-migrant party Alternative for Germany secured seats in that country’s parliament for the first time.

In the US, President Donald Trump is pressing for sweeping limits on immigration, including restricting travel from Muslim and other countries and slashing refugee admissions.

Francis has repeatedly urged countries to welcome migrants and stop collective expulsions, saying migrants’ dignity and right to protection outweigh national security concerns.

At the same time, he has acknowledged governments must manage refugee flows “with prudence”, taking into account how many people it can successfully integrate into society. “Christ urges us to welcome our brothers and sisters with our arms truly open, ready for a sincere embrace, a loving and enveloping embrace,” he said.

Pointing to the colonnade that envelopes St Peter’s Square, he said the embrace of migrants should mimic the colonnade, “which represents mother church who embraces everyone by sharing in our common journey”.