INTERVENTION
BY THE HOLY SEE DELEGATION AT THE INTERNATIONAL CONSULTATIVE CONFERENCE ON
"SCHOOL EDUCATION IN RELATION TO FREEDOM OF RELIGION OR BELIEF, TOLERANCE
AND NON-DISCRIMINATION" *
Madrid
Saturday, 24 November 2001
RELIGION PLAYS A CENTRAL ROLE IN THE LIVES
OF MILLIONS
1. The United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of All
Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination based on Religion or Belief notes
that "religion or belief, for anyone who professes either, is one of
the fundamental elements in his conception of life" (Preamble). The
recent Durban World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination,
Xenophobia and Related Intolerance recalled how " religion, spirituality
and belief play a central role in the lives of millions of women and men, and
in the way they live and treat other persons" (Durban Declaration §6).
This "International Consultative Conference on School
Education in relation to Freedom of Religion or Belief, Tolerance and
Non-Discrimination" comes at an opportune time. In an increasingly
interdependent world, we feel the need urgently to rediscover the roots of what
humankind has in common. Religious education is a powerful instrument to
help believers intensify their efforts towards the realization of the unity
of the one human family.
School education is a key factor in fostering understanding
and tolerance among religious communities. It must likewise be a key factor,
in often increasingly pluralist or secularised societies, in fostering
tolerance among all for religious expression and in ensuring religious freedom
for all.
EVERY RELIGION CAN BE A FERTILE GROUND FOR
PROMOTING HUMAN RIGHTS
2. The question of religious freedom was the object of a
special Declaration of the Second Vatican Council. On the specific question of
education, - in language which is mirrored in both the Universal Declaration
on Human Rights (§26,3) and in the Declaration on the Elimination of All Form
of Intolerance and Discrimination based on Religion or Belief (§5) - the
Vatican Council's Declaration stresses that parents "have the right to
decide in accordance with their own religious beliefs the form of religious
education which is to be given to their children"(§5), and it adds,
"parents should not be subjected directly or indirectly to unjust burdens
because of this freedom of choice"(ibid.). Governments have the
obligation to ensure that parents can attain full realisation of these
fundamental rights.
Religious freedom constitutes a fundamental human right and
can certainly be considered one of the cornerstones of the edifice of human
rights, because it touches such an intimate sphere of human existence and
personal identity, the relationship between the person and the Transcendent.
Every religion, just as every culture, is capable of fully
fostering all human rights and indeed of providing the fertile ground in which
respect for human rights and the respect for the dignity of all can take root.
It is possible - as can be seen, for example, in the practice of so many
Catholic school systems, which now reach over 200,000 - for each religious
tradition to educate its young members fully in the tenets of its own belief
and at the same time create within them a spirit of openness to and respect
for the religious traditions of others. Educational institutions established
by a particular religious tradition can be open to and fully respectful of the
rights of children of different religious traditions who attend them. This
Conference could profitably initiate a process of sharing best practices in
this regard.
RELIGIOUS VALUES CONTRIBUTE TO THE
ORGANIZATION AND INSPIRATION OF SOCIETY
3. The Declaration of the Second Vatican Council notes that
religious freedom also includes "the right of religious groups not to be
prevented from freely demonstrating the special value of their teachings for
the organization of society and the inspiration of human activity in
general" (§4). Religious discourse, if presented within the framework of
democratic debate, has the right to full citizenship in every society. To deny
respect for such discourse would be to impose a limit on people to express
their most deep-felt sentiments. Unfortunately, all too often, religion is
superficially presented in contemporary society only in the context of
division and intolerance, rather than its capacity to foster respect and
unity.
Obviously, religious freedom must be exercised in such a way
that it fully respects the views and the religious traditions of others.
Curricula for school-based religious education - in both religious and public
educational institutions - should include programmes that foster a more
accurate and a more sensitive knowledge and understanding of a broad range of
religious traditions. Education to sensitive respect for the religious values
of others belongs to the education of believers and non-believers alike. Much
unhealthy and negative stereotyping of religious traditions springs from a
lack of knowledge or from the lack of an open and sympathetic understanding of
the tenets of another's religious traditions.
Stringent efforts should be made by religious communities and
their leaders to prevent religious factors from being used to exacerbate
already existing historical, ethnic, social or political divisions.
Fundamental religious values should rather be directed towards rejecting
violence as a means of resolving disputes. Similarly, religious leaders should
be attentive to reject false interpretations of religious tenets that offend
human dignity or the unity of the human family. Religious-based school systems
should ensure especially that girls have full access to education.
A FUTURE OF DIALOGUE, UNDERSTANDING AND
RESPECT
4. Where mutual respect develops among religious groups, it
becomes possible for all to work more effectively for the common good, without
anyone renouncing his or her deep-felt convictions. It becomes possible to
address tensions that may have arisen in the past. It becomes possible to
re-read history together, in order to reach a better understanding of the
hurts that individual religious communities may have caused or have suffered.
This is a theme that has been particularly developed by Pope John Paul II, for
example, at a special ceremony of repentance that was held during the Jubilee
Year of 2000 or during his visit to significant centres of worship of other
confessions and religions.
Honestly addressing the tensions of the past generates a
strong force for the construction of a different future and for the beginnings
of a process of reconciliation and healing. The formation of future teachers
should pay special attention to their ability to sensitively address divisive
historical issues. Where necessary, school textbooks and curricula should be
revised to remove harmful or unbalanced presentations of other religious
traditions and historical events.
The task of fostering inter-religious dialogue belongs in the
first place to religious leaders themselves. Such dialogue should be extended
to include the widest possible sector of each religious community, with
special attention being given to young persons. All educational establishments
can and should be open to such respectful dialogue, which respects the
specific values of the religious traditions of each individual and opens out
to the values of others.
It is to be hoped that this International Consultative
Conference will be an important impetus worldwide to such a process of
dialogue, understanding and respect.
*L'Osservatore Romano 28.1.2001 p.2.
L'Osservatore Romano. Weekly Edition in English n.50 pp. 10, 11.
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