Holy See presents its
position before the UN’s Human Rights Council
Archbishop Ivan Jurkovic meets with Pope Francis. |
The Holy See’s Permanent Observer to the UN presents two
statements at the 37th Session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva.
By Sr Bernadette Mary Reis, fsp
Archbishop Ivan Jurkovič’s first statement consists in the
affirmation of the role of culture in society. His second statement covers
freedom of religion or belief.
Cultural Rights
Culture contributes to the very “enjoyment of human rights”
due to its ability to “facilitate social cohesion, counter intolerable
ideologies, promote reconciliation in post-conflict scenarios, and achieve
human development.” Education is the social structure that passes culture and
knowledge down to future generations. The Archbishop notes that the academic
arena “can be the space for a true experience of intercultural relationship.”
Since culture embraces so many elements, such as beliefs, the arts, and
language, “respect for cultural identity and freedom of thought, conscience,
and religion” go hand in hand.
Social and religious institutions foster cultural pluralism
when they mediate culture. “Mutual respect of identities, cultural values and
religious beliefs create the humus for the creation of
inclusive societies.” On the basis of these remarks, Archbishop Jurkovič
proposes that in such a climate, society can integrate immigrants by the
creation of “cultural and artistic exchange” and “cooperation between
educational systems and cultural organisations,” especially in
“conflict-scarred countries.”
He concludes this intervention by saying that “the Holy See
reaffirms the key role of art, culture, and religions in building bridges,
creating relations, fostering integral human development, and avoiding the
culture of waste and exclusion.”
Freedom of Religion or Belief
Because of the modern reality of interconnectedness in which
persons of diverse belief and cultures coexist together, freedom of religion
should find many opportunities of being expressed in the world today. Instead,
Archbishop Jurkovič says, “many societies around the world seem to adopt an
attitude of rejection towards religious freedom, marginalizing and at times
openly persecuting religious minorities, whether they are a traditional part of
the social landscape or they are just recently established in it.”
The Archbishop specifically mentions “blasphemy” and
“anti-conversion” laws, and mob violence as realities that “are unfortunately
still all too present in our world.” He insists that it is a prerequisite “on
which an authentic culture of human rights can be built” that the “deepest
convictions of members of a given society” are respected.
Quoting Pope Francis, the Archbishop says that the
imposition of ideologies or beliefs leaves society open to “the rise of modern
forms of ideological colonization by the stronger and the wealthier, to the
detriment of the poorer and the most vulnerable.” With this in mind, he says
that the “use of the expression ‘freedom from religion’ ” is “of the utmost
concern” for the Holy See since it betrays a patronizing view of religion when,
in the words of Pope Francis, “religion itself, the religious dimension, is not
a subculture; it is part of the culture of every people and every nation.”
Human Rights Council in Geneva
The UN’s Human Rights Council is an intergovernmental body
made up of 47 member states. This body meets three times a year in Geneva. The
Council addresses the violation of and the promotion of human rights. The
Sessions organized by the Council are a vehicle for panel discussions and other
events in order to aid dialogue and mutual understanding on specific themes.
The Holy See at the UN
The Holy See enjoys the status of permanent observer to the
UN since April 1964. In this position, the Holy See participates in
international discussions especially in matters of peace and human dignity.
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