Peru Journey Meeting with
Authorities Full text
Pope Francis during his visit to Peru.- AFP |
Pope Francis addresses Civil Authorities at Government
Palace in Lima
Address of the Holy Father
Meeting with Civil Authorities
Government Palace – Lima
Government Palace – Lima
Friday, 19 January 2018
Mr President,
Members of the Government and the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished Authorities,
Representatives of Civil Society,
Ladies and Gentlemen, dear friends,
Members of the Government and the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished Authorities,
Representatives of Civil Society,
Ladies and Gentlemen, dear friends,
As I arrive
at this historic edifice, I thank God for this opportunity to be on Peruvian
soil. I would like my words to be a message of greeting and esteem for
each of the sons and daughters of this people, that down the years has
preserved and enriched the wisdom handed down by its forebears and represents,
indeed, one of its greatest legacies.
I thank Mr
Pedro Pablo Kuczynsky, President of the Nation, for his invitation to visit the
country and for his words of welcome offered on your behalf.
My visit to
Peru has as its theme: “United by Hope”. If I may say so, seeing this
land is itself a reason for hope.
Part of
your territory includes the Amazon, which I visited this morning. It is
overall the largest tropical forest and the most extensive river system on the
planet. This “lung”, as it has been called, is one of the world’s regions
of great biodiversity, as it is home to a vast variety of species.
Yours too
is a wealth and variety of cultures, which increasingly intermingle and which
make up the soul of this people. It is a soul characterized by ancestral
values such as hospitality, esteem for others, respect and gratitude for mother
earth and creativity for new initiatives. It is marked likewise by a
shared sense of responsibility for the development of all, joined to a
solidarity that has often shown itself in your response to different disasters
you have experienced.
In this
regard, I would like to point to the young. They are the most vital gift
that this society possesses. With their dynamism and enthusiasm, they
promise, and encourage us to dream of, a hope-filled future, born of the
encounter between your lofty ancestral wisdom and the new eyes that youth
offers.
I also take
pleasure in a historical fact: that hope in this land has the face of
holiness. Peru has given birth to saints that blazed paths of faith for
the entire American continent. To name just one, Martin de Porres, a son
of two cultures, showed the strength and richness that comes about when people
focus on love. I could continue at length with this list of reasons,
material and spiritual, for hope. Peru is a land of hope that invites and
challenges its people to unity. This people has the duty to maintain
unity, among other things, precisely to defend all these reasons for hope.
Yet over
this hope a shadow is growing, a threat looms. “Never has humanity had
such power over itself, yet nothing ensures that it will be used wisely,
particularly when we consider how it is currently being used” (Laudato Si’,
104). This is evident in the way that we are stripping the earth of its
natural resources, without which no forms of life are possible. The loss
of jungles and forests means not only the loss of species, which could also be
extremely important resources for the future, but also the loss of vital
relationships that could end up altering the entire ecosystem (cf. ibid., 32).
In this
context, being “united in defense of hope” means promoting and developing an
integral ecology as an alternative to “an outdated model of development [that]
continues to produce human, societal and environmental decline” (Urbi et
Orbi Message, Christmas 2017). This calls for listening to local
persons and peoples, recognizing and respecting them as valid dialogue
partners. They preserve a direct link to the land, they know its times
and ways, and so they know the catastrophic effects produced, in the name of
development, by many projects. The vital fabric that constitutes the
nation is thus being altered. The degradation of the environment, sad to
say, cannot be separated from the moral degradation of our communities.
We cannot think of these as two separate realities.
For
example, black market mining has become a danger that is destroying people’s
lives; forests and rivers are being destroyed, with all the richness they
possess. This whole process of degradation brings with it and encourages
organizations operating outside of legal structures; these debase so many of
our brothers and sisters by subjecting them to human trafficking (a new form of
slavery), irregular employment and crime… and to other evils that gravely
affect their dignity and, at the same time, the dignity of the nation.
Working
together to defend hope demands that we remain very attentive to that other,
often subtle form of environmental degradation that increasingly contaminates
the whole system of life: corruption. How much evil is done to our Latin
American people and the democracies of this continent by this social “virus”, a
phenomenon that infects everything, with the greatest harm being done to the
poor and mother earth. Everything being done to combat this social
scourge deserves our utmost attention and help… This is a battle that involves
all of us. Being “united in defense of hope” requires a greater culture
of transparency among public entities, the private sector and civil
society. No one can be excluded from this process. Corruption is
preventable and calls for commitment on the part of all.
I encourage
and urge all those in positions of authority, in whatever sphere, to insist on
this path in order to bring your people and your land the security born of
feeling that Peru is a place of hope and opportunity for all, and not just for
a few. In this way, all Peruvians can feel that this country is theirs,
that here they can relate fraternally and equitably with their neighbours, and
help others in their need. A land where they can realize their own
future. And in this way to forge a Peru that makes room for people of
“all bloods” (José María Arguedas, Todas las sangres, Buenos Aires,
1964), a land in which the “the promise of Peruvian life” (Jorge Basadre, La
promesa de la vida peruana, Lima, 1958) can be achieved.
I wish to
renew in your presence the commitment of the Catholic Church, which has
accompanied the life of this nation, in this joint effort to continue working
so that Peru will continue to be a land of hope.
May Saint
Rosa of Lima intercede for each of you and for this blessed nation.
Thank you
once again.
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