Put family, children first: Pontiff to Africa leaders

25 Mar 2009

By The Record

LUANDA, Angola – Addressing Angolan political leaders and an international group of diplomats, Pope Benedict XVI appealed on behalf of African families struggling from the effects of poverty, disease and war.

Pope Benedict XVI wipes his face with a handkerchief during an evening prayer liturgy at the Basilica of Mary Queen of the Apostles in Yaounde, Cameroon, March 18. Photo: CNS/Alessandro Bianchi, Reuters

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Pope said women and girls in particular experience “crushing” discrimination and sexual exploitation. At the same time, he criticised agencies that, under the pretext of improving health care, try to promote abortion.
“How bitter the irony of those who promote abortion as a form of ‘maternal’ health care! How disconcerting the claim that the termination of life is a matter of reproductive health!” he said.
The Pope made the remarks on March 20 at the presidential palace in Luanda, the Angolan capital, where President Jose Eduardo Dos Santos welcomed him at an official ceremony. After private talks with the president, the Pope entered a room filled with foreign diplomats stationed in Angola, bishops and other dignitaries.
The Pope delivered his speech standing on a small stage decorated with Angolan and Vatican flags. After praising Angolan efforts to rebuild after a civil war, he turned to wider African questions and said the strains on African families include poverty, unemployment, disease and displacement.
“Particularly disturbing is the crushing yoke of discrimination that women and girls so often endure, not to mention the unspeakable practice of sexual violence and exploitation which causes such humiliation and trauma,” he said.
In raising the abortion issue, the Pope was returning to a subject the Vatican has pressed many times in international forums. The Vatican’s concern is that international agencies are pushing abortion as a human right.
In effect, the Pope said, these are policies promoted by “those who, claiming to improve the ‘social edifice,’ threaten its very foundations.”
The Pope pledged that, through its charitable agencies, the Church will “continue to do all it can to help families, including those suffering the harrowing effects of HIV/AIDS – and to uphold the human dignity of women and men.”
The Pope addressed broader issues in Africa as well. He said that for Africa to become the “continent of hope,” good people will have to work to transform it and free their people from greed, violence and unrest.
This passage should lead to the principles of every modern democracy: respect for human rights, transparent government, an independent judiciary, a free press, a civil service of integrity, and properly functioning schools and hospitals.
The most pressing element to the transformation was a determination to “excise corruption once and for all,” he said. People of Africa are calling out not for more programs, but for “a deep-seated, lasting conversion of hearts to sincere solidarity.”
“Their plea to those serving in politics, public service, international agencies and multinational companies is simply this: Stand alongside us in a profoundly human way; accompany us, and our families and our communities,” he said.
The Pope reminded richer nations not to forget their aid commitments to Africa, including the Millennium Development Goals adopted in 2000, which foresaw the commitment of 0.7 per cent of the gross national product for development assistance. That goal should not become one of the casualties of the current global financial crisis, he said.
The Pope returned to the theme of the family at his encounter the same evening in the apostolic nunciature with the 25 bishops of Angola and Sao Tome and Principe, asking them to defend the institution of marriage and the sanctity of life.
Many marriages today lack inner stability, he said, and “there is the widespread tendency in society and culture to call into question the unique nature and specific mission of the family based on marriage.”
- CNS