Pope: Indigenous Peoples, living
cry of hope for our common home
Pope Francis greeting indigenous peoples participating a forum in Rome (Vatican Media) |
Pope Francis meets with a group of 38 delegates from 31
indigenous populations who are attending the 4th Fourth Global Meeting of the
Indigenous Peoples Forum. The Forum is taking place in conjunction with the
42nd Governing Council of the International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD)
By Lydia O'Kane
Speaking in Rome on Thursday, Pope Francis focused on the
theme of the Indigenous Peoples Forum which is “Promoting Indigenous Peoples
Knowledge and Innovations for Climate Resilience and Sustainable Development.”
Highlighting the extreme importance of environmental issues, the Pope said that
the Forum was an invitation to, “look again at our planet, wounded in many
regions by human greed, by war conflicts that generate a flood of evils and
misfortunes, as well as by natural disasters that leave scarcity and
devastation in their wake.”
Joining forces for a better world
Pope Francis underlined that these scourges cannot continue
to be ignored by indifference and a lack of unity. On the contrary, he said,
“only a strong sense of fraternity will strengthen our resolve to help those in
need today and open the door of tomorrow to the generations that come after
us.” God created the earth for the benefit of all, emphasized the Pontiff, “so
that it would be a welcoming space in which no one would feel excluded and all
of us could find a home.”
Indigenous Peoples, living cry of hope
Indigenous Peoples, he said, with their "variety of
languages, cultures, traditions, knowledge and ancestral methods", should
“become for all a wake-up call, which highlights the fact that man is not the
owner of nature, but the one who manages it.”
These peoples, the Pope noted, “are a living cry of hope.
“They know what it is to listen to the earth, to see the earth, to touch the
earth.” They remind us that we human beings have a shared responsibility to
care for our "common home". “And if certain decisions taken so far
have ruined it”, he said, “ it is never too late to learn lessons and acquire a
new way of life.”
By engaging in generous dialogue and by joining forces, Pope
Francis concluded, “we will end up becoming more aware of the fact that we need
each other,” and be able to highlight the fact that “harmful behaviour
affecting the environment around us also has a negative impact on the serenity
and fluidity of coexistence; that indigenous people cannot continue to suffer
injustice and that young people have a right to a better world than ours and
expect coherent and convincing responses from us.”
Let us never forget the saying of our grandparents, recalled
the Pope, "God always forgives, men sometimes forgive, nature never
forgives".
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