Text of Communiqué from the Secretariat of State of the Holy See
Communiqué of the Secretariat of State The Ambassador of the Kingdom of Belgium,
acting under instructions from the Minister of Foreign Affairs, has informed the Secretary
for Relations with States of the Resolution with which the House of Representatives
in his country asked the Belgian Government to “condemn the unacceptable statements
of the Pope on the occasion of his journey to Africa and to protest officially to
the Holy See”. The meeting took place on 15 April 2009. The Secretariat of State
notes with regret this action, unusual in the context of the diplomatic relations
existing between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Belgium. It deplores the fact that
a Parliamentary Assembly should have thought it appropriate to criticize the Holy
Father on the basis of an isolated extract from an interview, separated from its context,
and used by some groups with a clear intent to intimidate, as if to dissuade the Pope
from expressing himself on certain themes of obvious moral relevance and from teaching
the Church’s doctrine. As is well known, the Holy Father, in answer to a question
concerning the efficacy and the realistic character of the Church’s positions on combating
Aids, stated that the solution is to be sought in two directions: on the one hand
through bringing out the human dimension of sexuality; and on the other, through true
friendship and willingness to help persons who are suffering. He also emphasized
the commitment of the Church in both these areas. Without this moral and educational
dimension, the battle against Aids will not be won. While in some European countries
an unprecedented media campaign was unleashed concerning the predominant, not to say
exclusive, value of prophylactics in the fight against Aids, it is consoling to note
that the moral considerations articulated by the Holy Father were understood and appreciated,
in particular by the Africans and the true friends of Africa, as well as by some members
of the scientific community. As one can read in a recent statement of the Regional
Episcopal Conference of West Africa (CERAO): “We are grateful for the message of
hope which [the Holy Father] came to entrust to us in Cameroon and Angola. He came
to encourage us to live in unity, reconciled with one another in justice and peace,
so that the Church in Africa can herself be a burning flame of hope for the life of
the entire continent. And we thank him for having restated for all, in a nuanced,
clear and insightful way, the common teaching of the Church concerning the pastoral
care of sufferers from Aids.”