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Fr
Lombardi: Note on Un, Holy See, Child Rights Committee
Vatican Radio February 7, 2014
http://en.radiovaticana.va/news/2014/02/07/fr_lombardi:_note_on_un,_holy_see,_child_rights_committee/en1-771163
(Vatican Radio) Please find, below, Vatican Radio's
translation of the full text of Fr Federico Lombardi, SJ's Note
containing some punctualizations on the UN, the Holy See and the
Committee on the Rights of the Child.
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After the large number of articles and comments that
followed the publication of the recommendations of the audit
Committee of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, it seems
useful to make a few comments and clarifications.
It is not appropriate to speak of confrontation
“between the UN and the Vatican”. The United Nations is a
reality that is very important to humanity today.
The Holy See has always provided strong moral support
to the United Nations as a meeting place among all the nations,
to foster peace in the world and the growth of the community of
peoples in harmony, mutual respect and mutual enrichment.
Countless documents and addresses of the Holy See at [the UN’s]
highest levels and the intense participation of the Holy See’s
representatives in the activities of many UN bodies attest to
this.
The highest authorities of the UN have ever been aware
of the importance of the moral and religious support of the Holy
See for the growth of the community of nations: so they invited
Popes to visit the organization and direct their words to the
General Assembly. In the footsteps of Paul VI, John Paul II
(twice) and Benedict XVI have done so. In short, the United
Nations, at the highest levels, appreciate and desire the
support of the Holy See and positive dialogue with it. So does
the Holy See, for the good of the human family. This is the
perspective in which the present questions ought to be raised.
International Conventions promoted by the United
Nations are one of the ways in which the international community
seeks to promote the dynamic of the search for peace and the
promotion of the rights of the human person in specific fields.
States are free to join. The Holy See/Vatican City State has
adhered to those it considers most important in the light of its
activities and its mission. (It should be noted that adherence
to a Convention entails a commitment to participation, reports,
etc. , which require staff and resources – for which reason the
Holy See must choose [to adhere to] a limited number of
Conventions, commensurate with its possibilities for
participation). Among these, in a timely manner, the Holy See
joined – among the first in the world – the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, in the light of the great work done in this
field, in many different forms ( educational, charitable , etc.
. ) and for so long, by the Catholic community in the world, and
in light of the Magisterium of the Church in this area, inspired
by the behavior of Jesus described in the Gospels.
Naturally, the operations of the UN are vast and
complex, and like any large organization – and precisely because
of its international and as far as possible universal nature –
embraces very different persons, positions and voices. It is
therefore no wonder that in the vast world of the UN different
visions shall encounter and even collide with each other.
Therefore, in order that the overall result be positive, a great
willingness to be open to dialogue is needed, along with
attentive respect for essential rules and procedures, and in
preparing activities.
For the verification of the implementation of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child there is a committee based
in Geneva, which holds two sessions a year, and which receives
the reports of the different Party States, studies them and
discusses them with the delegations sent by them, and formulates
recommendations for better implementation of the provisions of
the Convention. The recommendations made by the Committee are
often quite sparse and of relative weight. It is not by chance,
that there is rarely heard a worldwide echo of the
recommendations in the international press, even in the case of
countries where problems of human rights and [problems
regarding] children are known to be grave.
In the case of reports submitted to the Committee by
the Holy See in recent months on the implementation of the
Convention and the additional Protocols: ample written responses
were given to the questions subsequently formulated by the
Committee, after which followed a day for the hearing of a
special delegation of the Holy See in Geneva on January 16. Now
there has come, on February 5, the publication of the Committee
's concluding observations and recommendations . This
[publication] has aroused extensive reaction and response.
What is there to observe in this regard?
First, the Holy See 's adherence to the Convention was
motivated by a historical commitment of the universal Church and
the Holy See for the sake of the children. Anyone who does not
realize what this [commitment] represents for the sake of the
children in the world today, is simply unfamiliar with this
dimension of reality. 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. [The Holy See] will take its further
positions and will give account of them, and so on, without
trying to escape from a genuine dialogue, from the established
procedures, with openness to justified criticism – but the Holy
See will do so with courage and determination , without
timidity.
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.”
Finally, one cannot but observe that the tone,
development, and the publicity given by the Committee in its
document are absolutely anomalous when compared to its normal
progress in relations with other States that are party to the
Convention.
In sum: if the Holy See was certainly the subject of
an initiative and a media attention in our view unfairly
harmful, one needs to recognize that, in turn, the Committee has
itself attracted much serious and well-founded criticism.
Without desiring to place [responsibility for] what has
transpired “[on] the United Nations”, it must be said that the
UN carries the brunt of the negative consequences in public
opinion, for the actions of a Committee that calls itself [by
the UN name].
Let us try to find the correct plan of commitment for
the good of the children – even through the instrument of the
Convention. The Holy See will not allow its careful and reasoned
responses to be lacking.
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