Pope meets indigenous people of
Amazonia: Full text
Pope Francis arrives at the Madre de Dios indoor stadium of Puerto Maldonado, Peru, to meet indigenous people. (VaticanMedia) |
Speaking in Puerto Maldonado, the heartland of Peru’s
Amazonia region, Pope Francis calls for the defence of the rights, dignity and
land of the indigenous people.
APOSTOLIC VISIT OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO PERU
Address of the Holy Father
Meeting with the Peoples of Amazonia
Coliseo Madre de Dios – Puerto Maldonado
Friday, 19 January 2018
Address of the Holy Father
Meeting with the Peoples of Amazonia
Coliseo Madre de Dios – Puerto Maldonado
Friday, 19 January 2018
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Here
with you, I feel welling up within me the song of Saint Francis: “Praise be to
you, my Lord!” Yes, praise be to you for the opportunity you have given
us in this encounter. Thank you, Bishop David Martínez de Aguirre Guinea,
Hector, Yésica and María Luisa, for your words of welcome and for your witness
talks. In you, I would like to thank and greet all the inhabitants of
Amazonia.
I see
that you come from the different native peoples of Amazonia: Harakbut,
Esse-ejas, Matsiguenkas, Yines, Shipibos, Asháninkas. Yaneshas, Kakintes,
Nahuas, Yaminahuas, Juni Kuin, Madijá, Manchineris, Kukamas, Kandozi, Quichuas,
Huitotos, Shawis, Achuar, Boras, Awajún, Wampís, and others. I also see that
among us are peoples from the Andes who came to the forest and became
Amazonians. I have greatly looked forward to this meeting. Thank
you for being here and for helping me to see closer up, in your faces, the
reflection of this land. It is a diverse face, one of infinite variety
and enormous biological, cultural and spiritual richness. Those of us who
do not live in these lands need your wisdom and knowledge to enable us to enter
into, without destroying, the treasures that this region holds. And to
hear an echo of the words that the Lord spoke to Moses: “Remove the sandals
from your feet, for the place on which you are standing is holy ground” (Ex 3:5).
Allow
me to say once again: “Praise to you, Lord, for your marvellous handiwork in your
Amazonian peoples and for all the biodiversity that these lands embrace!
This
song of praise is cut short when we learn about, and see, the deep wounds that
Amazonia and its peoples bear. I wanted to come to visit you and listen
to you, so that we can stand together, in the heart of the Church, and share
your challenges and reaffirm with you a whole-hearted option for the defence of
life, the defence of the earth and the defence of cultures.
The
native Amazonian peoples have probably never been so threatened on their own
lands as they are at present. Amazonia is being disputed on various
fronts. On the one hand, there is neo-extractivism and the pressure being
exerted by great business interests that want to lay hands on its petroleum,
gas, lumber, gold and forms of agro-industrial monocultivation. On the
other hand, its lands are being threatened by the distortion of certain
policies aimed at the “conservation” of nature without taking into account the
men and women, specifically you, my Amazonian brothers and sisters, who inhabit
it. We know of movements that, under the guise of preserving the forest,
hoard great expanses of woodland and negotiate with them, leading to situations
of oppression for the native peoples; as a result, they lose access to the land
and its natural resources. These problems strangle her peoples and
provoke the migration of the young due to the lack of local alternatives.
We have to break with the historical paradigm that views Amazonia as an inexhaustible
source of supplies for other countries without concern for its inhabitants.
I
consider it essential to begin creating institutional expressions of respect,
recognition and dialogue with the native peoples, acknowledging and recovering
their native cultures, languages, traditions, rights and spirituality. An
intercultural dialogue in which you yourselves will be “the principal dialogue
partners, especially when large projects affecting your land are
proposed”.[1] Recognition and dialogue will be the best way to transform
relationships whose history is marked by exclusion and discrimination.
At
the same time, it is right to acknowledge the existence of promising
initiatives coming from your own communities and organizations, which advocate
that the native peoples and communities themselves be the guardians of the
woodlands. The resources that conservation practices generate would then
revert to benefit your families, improve your living conditions and promote
health and education in your communities. This form of “doing good” is in
harmony with the practices of “good living” found in the wisdom of our
peoples. Allow me to state that if, for some, you are viewed as an
obstacle or a hindrance, the fact is your lives cry out against a style of life
that is oblivious to its own real cost. You are a living memory of the
mission that God has entrusted to us all: the protection of our common home.
The
defence of the earth has no other purpose than the defence of life. We
know of the suffering caused for some of you by emissions of hydrocarbons,
which gravely threaten the lives of your families and contaminate your natural
environment.
Along
the same lines, there exists another devastating assault on life linked to this
environmental contamination favoured by illegal mining. I am speaking of
human trafficking: slave labour and sexual abuse. Violence against
adolescents and against women cries out to heaven. “I have always been
distressed at the lot of those who are victims of various kinds of human
trafficking. How I wish that all of us would hear God’s cry, ‘Where is
your brother?’ (Gen 4:9). Where is your brother or sister who
is enslaved? Let us not look the other way. There is greater
complicity than we think. This issue involves everyone!”[2]
How
can we fail to remember Saint Turibius, who stated with dismay in the Third
Council of Lima “that not only in times past were great wrongs and acts of
coercion done to these poor people, but in our own time many seek to do the
same…” (Session III, c. 3). Sadly, five centuries later, these words
remain timely. The prophetic words of those men of faith – as Hector and
Yèsica reminded us – are the cry of this people, which is often silenced or not
allowed to speak. That prophecy must remain alive in our Church, which
will never stop pleading for the outcast and those who suffer.
This
concern gives rise to our basic option for the life of the most
defenceless. I am thinking of the peoples referred to as “Indigenous
Peoples in Voluntary Isolation” (PIAV). We know that they are the most
vulnerable of the vulnerable. Their primitive lifestyle made them
isolated even from their own ethnic groups; they went into seclusion in the
most inaccessible reaches of the forest in order to live in freedom.
Continue to defend these most vulnerable of our brothers and sisters.
Their presence reminds us that we cannot use goods meant for all as consumerist
greed dictates. Limits have to be set that can help preserve us from all
plans for a massive destruction of the habitat that makes us who we are.
The
recognition of these people – who can never be considered a minority, but
rather authentic dialogue partners – as of all the native peoples, reminds us
that we are not the absolute owners of creation. We need urgently to
appreciate the essential contribution that they bring to society as a whole,
and not reduce their cultures to an idealized image of a natural state, much
less a kind of museum of a bygone way of life. Their cosmic vision and
their wisdom, have much to teach those of us who are not part of their culture.
All our efforts to improve the lives of the Amazonian peoples will prove
too little.[3]
The
culture of our peoples is a sign of life. Amazonia is not only a reserve
of biodiversity but also a cultural reserve that must be preserved in the face
of the new forms of colonialism. The family is, and always has been, the
social institution that has most contributed to keeping our cultures alive.
In moments of past crisis, in the face of various forms of imperialism, the
families of the original peoples have been the best defence of life.
Special care is demanded of us, lest we allow ourselves to be ensnared by
ideological forms of colonialism, disguised as progress, that slowly but surely
dissipate cultural identities and establish a uniform, single… and weak way of
thinking. Listen to the elderly. They possess a wisdom that puts
them in contact with the transcendent and makes them see what is essential in
life. Let us not forget that “the disappearance of a culture can be just
as serious, or even more serious, than the disappearance of a species of plant
or animal”.[4] The one way for cultures not to disappear is for them to
keep alive and in constant movement. How important is what Yésica and
Hector told us: “We want our children to study, but we don’t want the school to
erase our traditions, our languages; we don’t want to forget our ancestral
wisdom!”
Education helps us to build bridges and to create a culture of encounter.
Schooling and education for the native peoples must be a priority and
commitment of the state: an integrated and inculturated commitment that
recognizes, respects and integrates their ancestral wisdom as a treasure
belonging to the whole nation, as María Luzmila made clear to us.
I ask
my brother bishops to continue, as they are doing even in the remotest places
in the forest, to encourage intercultural and bilingual education in the
schools, in institutions of teacher training, and in the universities.[5]
I express my appreciation of the initiatives that the Amazonian Church in Peru
helps carry out in favour of the native peoples. These include schools,
student residences, centres of research and development like the José Pio Aza
Cultural Centre, CAAAP and CETA, and new and important intercultural projects
like NOPOKI, aimed expressly at training young people from the different ethnic
groups of our Amazonia.
I
likewise support all those young men and women of the native peoples who are
trying to create from their own standpoint a new anthropology, and working to
reinterpret the history of their peoples from their own perspective. I
also encourage those who through art, literature, craftsmanship and music show
the world your worldview and your cultural richness. Much has been
written and spoken about you. It is good that you are now the ones
to define yourselves and show us your identity. We need to listen to you.
How
many missionaries, men and women, have devoted themselves to your peoples and
defended your cultures! They did so inspired by the Gospel. Christ
himself took flesh in a culture, the Jewish culture, and from it, he gave us
himself as a source of newness for all peoples, in such a way that each, in its
own deepest identity, feels itself affirmed in him. Do not yield to those
attempts to uproot the Catholic faith from your peoples.[6] Each culture
and each worldview that receives the Gospel enriches the Church by showing a
new aspect of Christ’s face. The Church is not alien to your problems and
your lives, she does not want to be aloof from your way of life and
organization. We need the native peoples to shape the culture of the
local churches in Amazonia. Help your bishops, and the men and women
missionaries, to be one with you, and in this way, by an inclusive dialogue, to
shape a Church with an Amazonian face, a Church with a native face. In
this spirit, I have convoked a Synod for Amazonia in 2019.
I
trust in your peoples’ capacity for resilience and your ability to respond to
these difficult times in which you live. You have shown this at different
critical moments in your history, with your contributions and with your
differentiated vision of human relations, with the natural environment and your
way of living the faith.
I
pray for you, for this land blessed by God, and I ask you, please, not to
forget to pray for me.
Many
thanks!
Tinkunakama (Quechua:
Until we meet again)
[1] Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’, 146.
[2] Apostolic Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, 211.
[3] We hear disturbing reports about the spread of
certain diseases. The silence is alarming and deadly. By remaining
silent, we fail to work for prevention, especially among adolescents and young
people, and to ensure treatment, thus condemning the sick to a cruel
ostracism. We call upon states to implement policies of intercultural
health that take into account the experience and the worldview of the native
people, training professionals from each ethnic group who can deal with the
disease in the context of their own worldview. As I pointed out in
Laudato Si’, once again we need to speak out against the pressure applied to certain
countries by international organizations that promote reproductive policies
favouring infertility. These are particularly directed at the native
peoples. We know too that the practice of sterilizing women, at times
without their knowledge, continues to be promoted.
[4] Encyclical Letter Laudato Si’, 145.
[5] Cf. FIFTH GENERAL CONFERENCE OF THE LATIN AMERICA AND
CARIBBEAN BISHOPS, Aparecida Document (29 June 2007), 530.
[6] Cf. ibid., 531
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét