Pope
Francis: speech to UN officials in Nairobi
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis on Thursday afternoon spoke about the importance of
safeguarding the environment and ensuring a just distribution of the earth’s
wealth as he address directors and staff of the United Nations Offices in the
Kenyan capital, Nairobi.
The
Pope said Africa offers the world a beauty and natural richness which inspire
praise of the Creator. This patrimony of Africa and of all mankind, he said “is
constantly exposed to the risk of destruction caused by human selfishness of
every type and by the abuse of situations of poverty and exclusion”.
In
the context of economic relationships between States and between peoples, he
continued “we cannot be silent about forms of illegal trafficking which arise
in situations of poverty and in turn lead to greater poverty and
exclusion. Illegal trade in diamonds and precious stones, rare metals or
those of great strategic value, wood, biological material and animal products,
such as ivory trafficking and the relative killing of elephants, fuels
political instability, organized crime and terrorism”. This situation,
Pope Francis said, “is a cry rising up from humanity and the earth itself, one
which needs to be heard by the international community”.
On
his way to the meeting, the Pope symbolically planted a tree, which he
described as “an invitation to continue the battle against phenomena like
deforestation and desertification” in order to safeguard the future of
humanity. He also highlighted the importance of the upcoming international conference
in Paris on climate change which he said is “one of the principal challenges
facing humanity in our day”.
Please
find below the full text of Pope Francis’ address to the United Nations Office
at Nairobi
***************************************************
I
would like to thank Madame Sahle-Work Zewde, Director-General of the United
Nations Office at Nairobi, for her kind invitation and words of welcome, as
well as Mr Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the United Nations Environment
Programme, and Mr. Joan Clos, Executive Director of UN-Habitat. I take
this occasion to greet the personnel and all those associated with the
institutions who are here present.
On
my way to this hall, I was asked to plant a tree in the park of the United
Nations Centre. I was happy to carry out this simple symbolic act, which
is so meaningful in many cultures.
Planting
a tree is first and foremost an invitation to continue the battle against
phenomena like deforestation and desertification. It reminds us of the
importance of safeguarding and responsibly administering those “richly
biodiverse lungs of our planet”, which include, on this continent, “the Congo
basins”, a place essential “for the entire earth and for the future of
humanity”. It also points to the need to appreciate and encourage “the
commitment of international agencies and civil society organizations which draw
public attention to these issues and offer critical cooperation, employing
legitimate means of pressure, to ensure that each government carries out its
proper and inalienable responsibility to preserve its country’s environment and
natural resources, without capitulating to spurious local or international
interests” (Laudato Si’, 38).
Planting
a tree is also an incentive to keep trusting, hoping, and above all working in
practice to reverse all those situations of injustice and deterioration which
we currently experience.
In
a few days an important meeting on climate change will be held in Paris, where
the international community as such will once again confront these
issues. It would be sad, and I dare say even catastrophic, were
particular interests to prevail over the common good and lead to manipulating
information in order to protect their own plans and projects.
In
this international context, we are confronted with a choice which cannot be
ignored: either to improve or to destroy the environment. Every step we
take, whether large or small, individual or collective, in caring for creation
opens a sure path for that “generous and worthy creativity which brings out the
best in human beings” (ibid., 211).
“The
climate is a common good, belonging to all and meant for all”; “climate change
is a global problem with grave implications: environmental, social, economic,
political and for the distribution of goods; it represents one of the principal
challenges facing humanity in our day” (ibid., 23 and 25). Our response
to this challenge “needs to incorporate a social perspective which takes into
account the fundamental rights of the poor and the underprivileged” (ibid.,
93). For “the misuse and destruction of the environment are also
accompanied by a relentless process of exclusion” (Address to the United
Nations, 25 September 2015).
COP21
represents an important stage in the process of developing a new energy system
which depends on a minimal use of fossil fuels, aims at energy efficiency and
makes use of energy sources with little or no carbon content. We are
faced with a great political and economic obligation to rethink and correct the
dysfunctions and distortions of the current model of development.
The
Paris Agreement can give a clear signal in this direction, provided that, as I
stated before the UN General Assembly, we avoid “every temptation to fall into a
declarationist nominalism which would assuage our consciences. We need to
ensure that our institutions are truly effective” (ibid.). For this
reason, I express my hope that COP21 will achieve a global and
“transformational” agreement based on the principles of solidarity, justice,
equality and participation; an agreement which targets three complex and
interdependent goals: lessening the impact of climate change, fighting poverty
and ensuring respect for human dignity.
For
all the difficulties involved, there is a growing “conviction that our planet
is a homeland and that humanity is one people living in a common home” (Laudato
Si’, 164). No country “can act independently of a common
responsibility. If we truly desire positive change, we have to humbly
accept our interdependence” (Address to Popular Movements, 9 July 2015).
The problem arises whenever we think of interdependence as a synonym for
domination, or the subjection of some to the interests of others, of the
powerless to the powerful.
What
is needed is sincere and open dialogue, with responsible cooperation on the
part of all: political authorities, the scientific community, the business
world and civil society. Positive examples are not lacking; they
demonstrate that a genuine cooperation between politics, science and business
can achieve significant results.
At
the same time we believe that “human beings, while capable of the worst, are
also capable of rising above themselves, choosing again what is good and making
a new start” (Laudato Si’, 205). This conviction leads us to hope that,
whereas the post-industrial period may well be remembered as one of the most
irresponsible in history, “humanity at the dawn of the twenty-first century
will be remembered for having generously shouldered its grave responsibilities”
(ibid., 165). If this is to happen, the economy and politics need to be
placed at the service of peoples, with the result that “human beings, in
harmony with nature, structure the entire system of production and distribution
in such a way that the abilities and needs of each individual find suitable
expression in social life”. Far from an idealistic utopia, this is a
realistic prospect which makes the human person and human dignity the point of
departure and the goal of everything (cf. Address to Popular Movements, 9 July
2015).
This
much-needed change of course cannot take place without a substantial commitment
to education and training. Nothing will happen unless political and
technical solutions are accompanied by a process of education which proposes
new ways of living. A new culture. This calls for an educational
process which fosters in boys and girls, women and men, young people and
adults, the adoption of a culture of care – care for oneself, care for others,
care for the environment – in place of a culture of waste, a “throw-away
culture” where people use and discard themselves, others and the
environment. By promoting an “awareness of our common origin, of our
mutual belonging, and of the future to be shared with everyone”, we will favour
the development of new convictions, attitudes and lifestyles. “A great
cultural, spiritual and educational challenge stands before us, and it will
demand that we set out on the long path of renewal” (Laudato Si’, 202).
We still have time.
Many
are the faces, the stories and the evident effects on the lives of thousands of
persons whom the culture of deterioration and waste has allowed to be
sacrificed before the idols of profits and consumption. We need to be
alert to one sad sign of the “globalization of indifference”: the fact that we
are gradually growing accustomed to the suffering of others, as if it were
something normal (cf. Message for World Food Day, 16 October 2013, 2), or even
worse, becoming resigned to such extreme and scandalous kinds of “using and
discarding” and social exclusion as new forms of slavery, human trafficking,
forced labour, prostitution and trafficking in organs. “There has been a
tragic rise in the number of migrants seeking to flee from the growing poverty aggravated
by environmental degradation. They are not recognized by international
conventions as refugees; they bear the loss of the lives they have left behind
without enjoying any legal protection whatsoever” (Laudato Si’, 25). Many
lives, many stories, many dreams have been shipwrecked in our day. We
cannot remain indifferent in the face of this. We have no right.
Together
with neglect of the environment, we have witnessed for some time now a rapid
process of urbanization, which in many cases has unfortunately led to a
“disproportionate and unruly growth of many cities which have become unhealthy
to live in [and] inefficient” (ibid., 44). There we increasingly see the
troubling symptoms of a social breakdown which spawns “increased violence and a
rise in new forms of social aggression, drug trafficking, growing drug use by
young people, loss of identity” (ibid., 46), a lack of rootedness and social
anonymity (cf. ibid., 149).
Here
I would offer a word of encouragement to all those working on the local and
international levels to ensure that the process of urbanization becomes an
effective means for development and integration. This means working to
guarantee for everyone, especially those living in outlying neighbourhoods, the
basic rights to dignified living conditions and to land, lodging and
labour. There is a need to promote projects of city planning and
maintenance of public areas which move in this direction and take into
consideration the views of local residents; this will help to eliminate the
many instances of inequality and pockets of urban poverty which are not simply
economic but also, and above all, social and environmental. The
forthcoming Habitat-III Conference, planned for Quito in October 2016, could be
a significant occasion for identifying ways of responding to these issues.
In
a few days, Nairobi will host the 10th Ministerial Conference of the World
Trade Organization. In 1967, my predecessor Pope Paul VI, contemplating
an increasingly interdependent world and foreseeing the current reality of
globalization, reflected on how commercial relationships between States could
prove a fundamental element for the development of peoples or, on the other
hand, a cause of extreme poverty and exclusion (Populorum Progressio,
56-62). While recognizing that much has been done in this area, it seems
that we have yet to attain an international system of commerce which is
equitable and completely at the service of the battle against poverty and
exclusion. Commercial relationships between States, as an indispensable
part of relations between peoples, can do as much to harm the environment as to
renew it and preserve it for future generations.
It
is my hope that the deliberations of the forthcoming Nairobi Conference will
not be a simple balancing of conflicting interests, but a genuine service to
care of our common home and the integral development of persons, especially
those in greatest need. I would especially like to echo the concern of
all those groups engaged in projects of development and health care – including
those religious congregations which serve the poor and those most excluded –
with regard to agreements on intellectual property and access to medicines and
essential health care. Regional free trade treaties dealing with the protection
of intellectual property, particularly in the areas of pharmaceutics and
biotechnology, should not only maintain intact the powers already granted to
States by multilateral agreements, but should also be a means for ensuring a
minimum of health care and access to basic treatment for all.
Multilateral discussions, for their part, should allow poorer countries the
time, the flexibility and the exceptions needed for them to comply with trade
regulations in an orderly and relatively smooth manner. Interdependence
and the integration of economies should not bear the least detriment to
existing systems of health care and social security; instead, they should
promote their creation and good functioning. Certain health issues, like
the elimination of malaria and tuberculosis, treatment of so-called orphan
diseases, and neglected sectors of tropical medicine, require urgent political
attention, above and beyond all other commercial or political interests.
Africa
offers the world a beauty and natural richness which inspire praise of the
Creator. This patrimony of Africa and of all mankind is constantly
exposed to the risk of destruction caused by human selfishness of every type
and by the abuse of situations of poverty and exclusion. In the context of
economic relationships between States and between peoples, we cannot be silent
about forms of illegal trafficking which arise in situations of poverty and in
turn lead to greater poverty and exclusion. Illegal trade in diamonds and
precious stones, rare metals or those of great strategic value, wood,
biological material and animal products, such as ivory trafficking and the
relative killing of elephants, fuels political instability, organized crime and
terrorism. This situation too is a cry rising up from humanity and the
earth itself, one which needs to be heard by the international community.
In
my recent visit to the United Nations Headquarters in New York, I expressed the
desire and hope that the work of the United Nations and of all its multilateral
activities may be “the pledge of a secure and happy future for future
generations. And so it will, if the representatives of the States can set
aside partisan and ideological interests, and sincerely strive to serve the
common good” (Address to the UN, 25 September 2015).
Once
again I express the support of the Catholic community, and my own, to continue
to pray and work that the fruits of regional cooperation, expressed today in
the African Union and the many African agreements on commerce, cooperation and
development, may be vigorously pursued and always take into account the common
good of the sons and daughters of this land.
May
the blessing of the Most High be with each of you and your peoples. Thank
you.
(Christopher Altieri)
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