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ADDRESS OF POPE JOHN
PAUL II TO THE PAEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGISTS TAKING PART IN THE CONGRESS SPONSORED
BY THE
«BAMBIN GESÙ»
HOSPITAL OF ROME
Tuesday, 22 May 1984
Dear Friends,
1. I greet you most cordially, and I congratulate you on the noble commitment
which has brought you from all parts of the world to take part in a Congress
devoted to the care of children suffering from heart ailments.
There are many
surgeons, and equally many paediatric cardiologists, who work together in order
to relieve the sufferings of these children. Parents turn to them with full
confidence, entrusting their offspring to them in the certainty that they will
give of the best of their knowledge, their skill and their dedication, in order
to send their little patients home fully or at least partially cured of the
defects which had developed during the prenatal period.
2. This branch of
paediatrics and heart surgery has made great progress in the course of the last
ten years. After the preliminary examination at the sickbed, it has now become
possible to use methods of diagnosis which are extremely advanced and highly
reliable, enabling those whose task it is to correct congenital heart defects to
have an exact picture of what is needed in order to achieve the most perfect
results possible from anatomical and functional restructuring, at the same time
keeping surgical risks to a minimum.
After the completion of sophisticated
analyses and the use of advanced instruments in the diagnosis and correction of
the defects involved, there comes post-operative care, which itself is assisted
by modern techniques and equipment devised to save the lives of children who in
many cases risk early death if they do not receive treatment at exactly the
right time.
It is for this reason that medical men and women have studied the
methods and techniques for dealing with cardiac illness from the first moments
of life. Some of them, including some of you here today, are studying the means
of treating children still in their mother’s womb, with the development of
methods capable of dealing effectively with heart defects before birth, in some
cases correcting them even without a surgical operation.
3. The efforts being
made today will be crowned with success and will truly penetrate the mystery of
life if this research is approached with certain attitudes. In the first place,
with the humility of the scientist who knows a great deal but who is also aware
that he understands only a small part of the mysteries he is dealing with. Then
there is a need for strength, dedication and courage, in order to continue with
studies that at times seem to be fruitless, or which on occasions prove to be on
the wrong path, but which with persistence will finally lead to a solution of
the problem in hand. And there is the need for faith, which is a sure support in
the search for scientific truth through the phenomena of the life of human
beings and other living creatures.
4. But all this research and all these efforts would be
impossible if they were not sustained by the teamwork that is one of the marks
of this activity.
A debt of gratitude is owed to all those involved in this
sphere: obstetricians, experts in child-care, paediatricians, anaesthetists.
theatre staff and technicians, laboratory personnel, nurses, ward staff - all
those who ensure the various hospital services, and without whom the great
successes attained today would not be possible. We also know that their
commitment often goes well beyond strict duty. Their love for their work, their
dedication and their sense of responsibility frequently impel them to make extra
efforts in order to ensure the success of an operation, to save a life and to
restore to its parents a child now happily cured.
5. How often surgeons and doctors themselves experience the
anguish of having to deal with cardiac disease of an extremely complex nature.
Sometimes they are able to solve the problems involved, but on occasion the
illness is so grave and untreatable that even their great skill is unable to
cure the ill or save the child’s life.
We are deeply aware of the problems that face you in your
mission as scientists and doctors, and which at times become tragedies for your
consciences as human beings and believers. Only if your conscience is sustained
by strong faith can you take comfort from the conviction that everything has
been done for the ultimate good of the child.
At such moments you will be encouraged by several factors to
continue with your researches and not to lose heart. You will be sustained by
the solidity of your training, the certainty drawn from experience, your
confidence in your own abilities. You will be helped by your respect for
human suffering and the anxiety of your patients’ families, by your conviction
of the value of the life of the sick child entrusted to your skill. You
will be supported by your knowledge of the capabilities of your
collaborators. And you will have faith in the help that is always
available even beyond human powers, a help that is ever more effective if it is
invoked before an important decision or a difficult operation.
6. I would like to close these reflections by offering you a
thought that, on the human and religious levels, can serve as a sort of
summing-up.
In the Christian view, God wishes man to collaborate with him
in the still continuing work of creation. An activity like yours, which is
devoted to helping small human beings to escape early death and to grow up into
healthy adults, is part of that collaboration on the loftiest levels of the plan
of the Creator.
The nobility of your mission is in direct relation with a
programme of love and life that has placed man, every human being, every unique
and unrepeatable individual, at the pinnacle of creation.
This is a thought that can encourage you to go forward with
perseverance, especially at those inevitable times of defeat and failure, an
encouragement to invoke him who is the Lord of life and who asks for the
assistance of your minds, your hands and your hearts.
With these thoughts I invoke God’s blessings upon your work,
upon yourselves and upon your families.
©
Copyright 1984 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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