Philippine Asian News Today Vol 20 no 19 | Page 25
October 1 - 15, 2018
PHILIPPINE ASIAN NEWS TODAY
RELIGIOUS
Pope says ‘beautiful words’
must lead to collective
action
Vatican City - Feeding the
hungry requires combined action
and political will to provide real help
for the poor, Pope Francis has said.
In an Oct. 16 letter marking
World Food Day, Pope Francis said
that words needed become actions
in the effort to eliminate poverty and
hunger.
“We do indeed have the
adequate means and framework
so that beautiful words and good
wishes may become an action plan
of substance that leads effectively
to the eradication of hunger in our
world,” the Pope said Tuesday.
“To this end we need joint
efforts, upright hearts, and persistent
concern to firmly and resolutely
make the other’s problem one’s
own.”
There are “immense obstacles”
to solving problems, and barriers
that are “the fruit of indecision or
delays, and a lack of enthusiasm
on the part of responsible political
leaders who are often absorbed
purely by electoral concerns or are
focused on biased, transitory or
limited perspectives,” he said.
The pope’s message for World
Food Day was sent to José Graziano
da Silva, director general of the Food
and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations. This year’s World
Food Day aims for a zero-hunger
world by the year 2030.
In the letter, the pontiff
advocated policies for the real needs
of the poor, especially regarding
levels of agricultural production,
access to food markets, and other
initiatives and actions. He stressed
the need to realize that all countries
are “equal in dignity” when it comes
to making decisions.
“What is needed is the
willingness to end hunger, and this
ultimately will not happen without
a moral conviction that is shared
by all peoples and all religious
persuasions, where the integral
good of the person is at the heart of
all initiatives and consists in ‘doing
to another what we would want done
to ourselves’.”
“We are speaking of an action
based on solidarity among all nations
and of the means that express the
disposition of the people,” he said,
stressing that it is imperative for
civil society, media, and educational
institutions to join forces.
“From now until 2030 we have
12 years to set up initiatives that
are vigorous and consistent; not
giving in to occasional spurts or
intermittent and fleeting headlines,
but rather facing up unremittingly to
hunger and its causes in a spirit of
solidarity, justice and consistency,”
the Pope continued.
“The poor expect from us
an effective help that takes them
out of their misery, not mere
propositions or agreements that,
after studying in a detailed way the
roots of their misery, bear as their
fruit only solemn events, pledges
that never materialize, or impressive
publications destined only to enlarge
library catalogues,” he said.
One in nine people around
the world lack enough food to eat,
according to Catholics Confront
Global Poverty, a joint initiative of the
U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops
and Catholic Relief Services, said
that
The initiative has expressed
its frustration at the failure of the
Congressional Farm Bill Conference
Committee to finalize the “critical
piece of legislation” and pass it into
law before it expired on Sept. 30.
Catholics Confront Global
Poverty is calling on Catholics and
others to contact their lawmakers to
ensure that “critical improvements”
to international food security
programs are present in the final
version of the bill.
Catholic Relief Services is the
largest private distributor of U.S.
food aid in response to immediate
emergencies including drought,
flooding, or war or conflict. The
agency also has land management
and conservation programs to
preserve and expand productive
farmland.
While the pope’s remarks
addressed global policy priorities
and solutions for poverty and hunger,
Joseph Cullen, a spokesperson
for the Knights of Columbus, said
the fraternal organization and its
1.9 million members worldwide
are among those working to fight
hunger directly, both overseas and
close to home.
Pope Francis’ message further
lamented the incongruity between
technological advancement and
continued problems with hunger.
“In this twenty-first century that
has seen considerable advances
in the field of technology, science,
communications and infrastructure,
we ought to feel shame for not
having achieved the same advances
in humanity and solidarity, and so
satisfy the primary needs of the most
disadvantaged,” he said in his World
Food Day message.
“Neither can we console
ourselves simply for having faced
emergencies
and
desperate
situations of those most in need.
We are all called to go further. We
can and we must do better for the
helpless. We must move to concrete
action, so that the scourge of hunger
disappears completely.”
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