Pope: protecting children in the digital world top
priority
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis received the
participants in the first-ever World Congress on Child Dignity in the
Digital World on Friday. The Centre for Child Protection at
the Pontifical Gregorian University hosted the four-day event,
which brought experts in child care, internet security, law enforcement,
education, and a host of other fields together to share experiences and best
practices, with a view to addressing the problem of the effective protection of
the dignity of minors in the digital world.
Child dignity – a crisis and a response in context
In remarks prepared for the participants and delivered to
them in the Clementine Hall of the Apostolic Palace shortly
after noon on Friday, Pope Francis placed the challenges
facing individuals and whole societies the world, over, in the context of the
struggle not only to articulate, but effectively to guarantee, the rights and
dignity of every person – especially the weakest and most vulnerable, and chief
among these, children and young people – on which the human family has embarked
and in which the Church has been engaged especially since the
drafting of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and
the 1959 Declaration on the Rights of the Child.
“As representatives of various scientific disciplines and
the fields of digital communications, law and political life,” Pope
Francis said, “you [participants in the World Congress] have come
together precisely because you realize the gravity of these challenges linked
to scientific and technical progress.” He went on to say, “With great
foresight, you have concentrated on what is probably the most crucial challenge
for the future of the human family: the protection of young people’s dignity,
their healthy development, their joy and their hope.”
Speaking specifically of the danger the proliferation of
pornographic material poses in the digital age, Pope Francis said, “The spread
of printed pornography in the past was a relatively small phenomenon compared
to the proliferation of pornography on the net.”
He went on to say, “[W]e must not let ourselves be overcome
by fear, which is always a poor counsellor, nor let ourselves be paralyzed by
the sense of powerlessness that overwhelms us before the difficulty of the
task,” at hand.
“Rather,” he said, “we are called to join forces, realizing
that we need one another in order to seek and find the right means and
approaches needed for effective responses.”
Painful lessons - profound commitment
Pope Francis also spoke of the painful lessons
the Church has learned through her recent experience
with clerical sex abuse, saying that the Church has come to
acknowledge her own failures in providing for the protection of children.
“[E]xtremely grave facts have come to light,” he said, “for which we have
to accept our responsibility before God, before the victims and before public
opinion.” The Pope went on to say, “For this very reason, as a
result of these painful experiences and the skills gained in the process of
conversion and purification, the Church today feels especially
bound to work strenuously and with foresight for the protection of minors and
their dignity, not only within her own ranks, but in society as a whole and
throughout the world.”
The pernicious effects of mainstreaming pornography
The Holy Father also discussed the
pernicious effects that the so-called “mainstreaming” of pornography – not only
its broad and ready availability, but also the acceptance of it by society – on
adults. “We rightly insist on the gravity of these problems for minors,” he
said, “but we can also underestimate or overlook the extent that they are also
problems for adults.”
The Pope noted that the spread of ever more
extreme pornography and other improper uses of the internet not only causes
disorders, dependencies and grave harm among adults, but also has a real impact
on the way we view love and relations between the sexes. “We would be seriously
deluding ourselves,” he said, “were we to think that a society where an
abnormal consumption of internet sex is rampant among adults could be capable
of effectively protecting minors.”
Warning against a “technocratic” approach to the problem
“The second mistaken approach would be to think that
automatic technical solutions, filters devised by ever more refined algorithms
in order to identify and block the spread of abusive and harmful images, are
sufficient to deal with these problems,” he said. “But there is also an urgent
need, as part of the process of technological growth itself, for all those
involved to acknowledge and address the ethical concerns that this growth
raises, in all its breadth and its various consequences.”
What the internet is, and is not
A third risk of which we must be aware in our approach to
the digital world is the deluded notion that “the net” is or should be a realm
of unlimited freedom.
While the internet and other technologies
that are part of the contours, content, and structures of this new digital
world have opened vast new fora for free expression and free exchange of ideas
and information, it has also offered new means for engaging in heinous illicit
activities, including the abuse of minors and offences
against their dignity, the corruption of their minds and violence against their
bodies.
“This,” said Pope Francis, “has nothing to do
with the exercise of freedom: it has to do with crimes that need to be fought
with intelligence and determination, through a broader cooperation among
governments and law enforcement agencies on the global level, even as the net
itself is now global.”
Final Declaration
Toward this end, the participants produced a final document, The Declaration of Rome, which
includes its own urgent call to action.
Pope Francis received the Declaration from
a young girl participating in the Congress, who gave it to him “on behalf of
millions of young people around the world who need information and far more
protection from the risks of sexual and other forms of abuse on the
internet."
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