Pope: Unhealthy drinking water
an immense shame in 21st century
A bottle of clean drinking water.(2018 Getty Images) |
Pope Francis sends a message to an International Conference
entitled, "The management of a common good: access to drinking water for
all" which is taking place in Rome on the 8th November.
The one day International Conference is being held at the
Pontifical Urbaniana University and has been organized by the Dicastery for
Promoting Intergral Human Development in collaboration with the Embassies
accredited to the Holy See of France, Italy, Monaco and the United States.
In his message, the Pope says the fact that in many parts of
the world, people do not have access to clean water and often die from
unhealthy water, “ is an immense shame for humanity in the 21st century.” He
goes on to say that, “unfortunately, in many of the countries where the
population does not have regular access to drinking water, there is no shortage
of arms and ammunition, which continues to worsen the situation.”
Corruption and economic interests
The Pope adds, that corruption and economic interests all
too often prevail over the needs of those who require clean water. Pope Francis
goes on to express the hope that those who speak and participate at this
Conference will be able to stress the urgency, will and determination needed on
this issue.
Holy See and Church commitment to clean water
The Holy See and the Church, he points out “are committed to
the access to clean water for all. This commitment is manifested in many
initiatives such as the creation of infrastructure, training, and advocacy...,
he says.” The Pope underlines that “adequate anthropology is, in fact,
indispensable for responsible and supportive lifestyles, for a true ecology, as
well as for the recognition of access to drinking water as a right flowing from
human dignity, and therefore incompatible with the concept of water as a
commodity.”
From the point of view of faith, he says, in every thirsty
man we perceive the same image of God, as we read in Matthew's Gospel: "I
was thirsty and you gave me no drink". Noting that this Conference
appropriately involves representatives of different faiths and cultures, the
Pontiff comments that, “the dual spiritual and cultural dimension of water
should never be neglected, since it is central to shaping social fabric, coexistence
and community organization.” He ends the message by inviting participants to
meditate on the “symbology of water in the main religious traditions, exhorting
them equally to “contemplate this resource which, as St Francis of Assisi
wrote, is "very useful, very human and precious and chaste.”
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