Pope: to fight hunger combat climate change
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| File phone of homeless Indian residents eat a meal at the roadside on World Food Day in Hyderabad.- AFP |
(Vatican Radio) The annual
World Food Day is being observed this Sunday October 16th and has as its theme
"the climate is changing.” In a message issued Friday to mark the
occasion, Pope Francis said everyone has a responsibility to protect the planet
for future generations.
In his message to the
Director General of the Food and Agriculture Organization, José Graziano da
Silva, Pope Francis focused his attention on the theme for this year’s World
Food Day, "the climate is changing. The Pope said that this theme,
"leads us to consider the fight against hunger as a goal even more
difficult to achieve, in the presence of a complex phenomenon such as climate
change.
The Holy Father again
stressed the importance of being stewards of creation, adding that, “we must
first admit that the various negative effects on our climate have come from the
daily conduct of persons, communities, peoples and states.”
He underlined that ethical
and moral choices were not enough to protect the planet. What was also needed,
he said, was political action, and that meant making the “necessary choices to
discourage or encourage behaviors and lifestyles, for the benefit of the
younger generation and those to come.
In his message, Pope Francis
paid particular attention to those who suffer as a direct result of climate
change, including, whom he called climate migrants, those who work in the
fields, farming, small-scale fisheries, forests, or those live in rural areas
in direct confrontation with the effects of climate change. But the Pope noted
that much can be learned from rural communities, such as, adapting a lifestyle
“that can help defend against the logic of consumption and production at all
costs.”
The Holy Father also
cautioned against overlooking the cycles of the seasons or improperly modifying
the different species of animals and plants. Producing quality, he said, “that
gives excellent results in the laboratory, may be advantageous for some, but
can have disastrous effects for others.”
Speaking again about the
culture of food waste, he said “world production levels are sufficient to ensure
food for all, provided there is an equitable distribution.” But, he also spoke
out about destruction of food simply for economic reasons.
Concluding his message the
Holy Father said he echoed, “the desire of so many in hoping that the
objectives outlined by the Paris Agreement do not remain pretty words, but that
they would become courageous decisions.”

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