Ecuador's
President talks about lasting impact of papal visit
(Vatican
Radio) Pope Francis left Ecuador on Wednesday evening at the end of his brief
visit to the nation, the first stop on his week-long pastoral visit to Latin
America. Among those gathered at the airport in the capital, Quito, to bid
farewell to the Pope en route for his next destination, Bolivia, was Ecuadoran
President Rafael Correa.
Vatican
Radio’s French correspondent on this papal journey, Olivier Bonnel spoke to the
president following the Pope’s departure to talk about the lasting impact of
the visit….
President
Correa says the Pope’s message was very strong, very important for the people
of Ecuador, in particular his words in the Church of St Francis where he spoke
about gratuity, about giving and receiving freely. He spoke about poverty
and those who are excluded from society….certainly this is a message which we
will reflect on and try to put into practice, into concrete action.
Asked
about the Pope’s words on ‘integral ecology’, the president notes that
Ecuador’s constitution was the first in the history of humanity to speak of the
rights of nature and the environment, just as the Pope’s encyclical speaks of
water as a human right. I think the encyclical will be a very important
document for the forthcoming summit on the environment in Paris, he adds.
The
Ecuadoran leader also notes he was the only head of state to be invited to an
international conference on the environment in the Vatican (organised by the
Pontifical Academy of Sciences ahead of the release of ‘Laudato Si’),
underlining all the work that his country is doing to protect nature and combat
the effects of climate change.
President
Correa believes that the moral authority of the Pope will achieve results at
the Paris summit, but he says it will require strong action to tackle the
political problems.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét