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INTERVENTION OF THE HEAD OF THE HOLY SEE
DELEGATION
SPECIAL ENVOY OF HIS HOLINESS POPE BENEDICT XVI
TO THE UNITED NATIONS CONFERENCE
ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (RIO DE JANEIRO - BRAZIL, 22 JUNE 2012)
ADDRESS BY HIS
EMINENCE CARD. ODILO PEDRO SCHERER
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Friday, 22 June 2012
Madame President, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen, My delegation warmly thanks the Government of Brazil for hosting this
important Conference on sustainable development, expresses gratitude to the
people of Brazil for their warm hospitality, and is pleased to participate
in this timely gathering of representatives of the international community
meeting at this significant juncture in human history.
Now is the opportune time to address the many threats to the human family
and its earthly home posed by the persisting injustice of hunger, poverty
and underdevelopment which continue to plague our societies. It is the firm
hope of the Holy See that this opportunity may provide the occasion at last
to set aside the hermeneutic of suspicion underpinning partisan self-interest
and protectionism in favour of a true solidarity between us, especially with
the poor. This is the time to commit ourselves to a more just distribution
of the abundant goods of this world and to the pursuit of a more integral
development which corresponds to the dignity of every human being.
For the Holy See, this requires above all maintaining the proper relation
of the means to its end. Standing at the centre of the created world is the
human person – and, therefore, also at the centre of sustainable development,
as affirmed by the First Rio Principle. Each individual human life, from
conception until natural death, is of equal value and dignity.
Any new model of development, such as the "green economy," must be
anchored in and permeated by those principles which are the basis for the
effective promotion of human dignity, namely: responsibility, even when
changes must be made to patterns of production and consumption; promoting
and sharing in the common good; access to primary goods including such
essential and fundamental goods as nutrition, health, education, security
and peace; solidarity of a universal scope, capable of recognising the unity
of the human family; protection of creation linked to inter-generational
equity; the universal destination of goods and the fruits of human
enterprise; and the accompanying principle of subsidiarity, which permits
public authorities at all levels to operate in an efficacious manner for the
uplifting of each and every person and community. This is all the more
marked in international relations where application of these principles
between and within states favours an appropriate transfer of technology, the
promotion of a global commercial system that is inclusive and fair, as well
as respect for obligations in aid-for-development and the determination of
new and innovative financial instruments which place human dignity, the
common good, and the safeguarding of the environment at the centre of
economic activity. The unique and fundamental role of the family – which the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares the fundamental group-unit of
society – deserves special mention here because education and development
begins in the family, where all these principles are transmitted to and
assimilated by future generations so that their members assume their proper
responsibility in society.
The right to water, the right to food, the right to health and the right
to education are intrinsically linked to the right to life and to the right
to development. Therefore, we must be bold in affirming them, and equally
resolved to safeguard the evident reality that these rights are at the
service of the human person. The risk of obscuring this correct relationship
seems particularly to be the case in the right to health, where the
promotion of a conception of health can be observed that profoundly menaces
the dignity of the human person. Imposing death upon the most vulnerable
human lives – namely, those in the safest sanctuary of their mothers’ wombs
– cannot conceivably be brought under the nomenclature of health-care or
simply health. This performs no true service to authentic human development
or its true appreciation; indeed it constitutes the greatest violation of
human dignity and unjustifiable disservice because development, at all
stages of life, is at the service of human life.
Madame President,
The ongoing economic and financial crisis has risked undermining the
great progress made in recent decades in technological and scientific
development. Engaging such problems honestly and courageously will challenge
the international community to a renewed and deepened reflection on the
meaning of the economy and its purposes, as well as a renewal of models of
development which will not allow the ‘why’ of development to be overwhelmed
by the urgent ‘how’ of technological solutions. This examination must
include not merely the economic or ecological state of health of the planet,
but must also require taking stock of the moral and cultural crisis, the
symptoms of which are now evident in all parts of the world. This is
undoubtedly a complex challenge to confront, but the Holy See stresses the
importance of moving from a merely technological model of development to an
integrally human model which takes as its point of departure the dignity and
worth of each and every person. Each individual member of society is called
to adopt a vocational attitude which freely assumes responsibility, in
genuine solidarity with one another and all of creation.
Madame President,
In conclusion, Madame President, it is people who are charged with
stewardship over nature; but as with everything human, this stewardship
necessarily possesses an ethical dimension. In the discharge of this right
and duty, a just solidarity with our fellow human beings is always implicit,
including those yet to be born. This requires of us a duty towards future
generations who will inherit the consequences of our decisions. In this
regard, this Conference provides an opportunity for governments to come
together to help chart a course for advancing development for all people
especially those who are most in need.
Once again, Madame President, we express our gratitude for the leadership
of Brazil in hosting this Conference, and sincerely hope that this will help
promote the future that together we all need.
Thank you.
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