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Vatican
Spokesman on Un Report: " One Is Entitled to Amazement"
By Catherine Harmon Catholic World Report
February 7, 2014
http://www.catholicworldreport.com/Blog/2917/vatican_spokesman_on_un_report_one_is_entitled_to_amazement.aspx#.Uvc9Us67KVq
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Jesuit Father Federico
Lombardi, the Vatican spokesman, addresses a news conference
in July 2013.
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After the
release of a report from the United Nations’ Committee on the
Rights of the Child earlier this week that roundly criticized the
Vatican’s response to clerical sex abuse worldwide, the Vatican’s
spokesman today issued some “comments
and clarifications” about the Holy See’s position on the report.
The head of the Vatican Press Office, Father Federico
Lombardi, SJ, reiterated the Vatican’s commitment to the UN’s
Convention on the Rights of the Child, which the Committee on the
Rights of the Child was established to implement: “The Holy See,
therefore, as the Holy See’s Secretary of State, Archbishop
Pietro Parolin has said, continues its efforts to implement the
Convention and to maintain an open, constructive and engaged
dialogue with the organs contained therein.”
Lombardi continues:
At the same time, one cannot fail to see that the latest
recommendations issued by the Committee appear to present – in
the opinion of those who have followed well the process that
preceded them – grave limitations.
They have not taken adequate account of the responses,
both written and oral, given by the representatives of the Holy
See. Those who have read and heard these answers do not find
proportionate reflections of them in the document of the
Committee, so as to suggest that it was practically already
written, or at least already in large part blocked out before the
hearing.
In particular, the [Observations’] lack of understanding
of the specific nature of the Holy See seem serious. It is true
that the Holy See is a reality different from other countries,
and that this makes it less easy to understand the Holy See’s
role and responsibilities . [These particularities], however,
have been explained in detail many times in the Holy See’s twenty
years and more of adherence to the Convention, and [specifically
addressed] in recent written responses. [Are we dealing with] an
inability to understand, or an unwillingness to understand? In
either case, one is entitled to amazement.
The way in which the objections [contained in the
Concluding Observations] were presented, as well as the
insistence on diverse particular cases, seem to suggest that a
much greater attention was given to certain NGOs, the prejudices
of which against the Catholic Church and the Holy See are well
known, rather than to the positions of the Holy See itself, which
were also available in a detailed dialogue with the Committee.
A lack of desire to recognize all the Holy See and the
Church have done in recent years, [especially as regards]
recognizing errors, renewing the regulations, and developing
educational and preventive measures, is in fact typical of such
organizations. Few, other organizations or institutions, if any,
have done as much. This, however, is definitely not what one
understands by reading the document in question.
Finally, and this is perhaps the most serious
observation: the Committee’s comments in several directions seem
to go beyond its powers and to interfere in the very moral and
doctrinal positions of the Catholic Church, giving indications
involving moral evaluations of contraception, or abortion, or
education in families, or the vision of human sexuality, in light
of [the Committee’s] own ideological vision of sexuality itself.
For this reason, in the official communique released Wednesday
morning there was talk of “an attempt to interfere in the
teaching of the Catholic Church on the dignity of the human
person and in the exercise of religious freedom.”
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