Vatican Releases Message on Responsible Tourism Ahead of Summer Season
(10 July 09 - RV) Made public today was a pastoral message for World Tourism Day published
by the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People.
World Tourism Day falls this year on 27 September and the theme of the English-language
message is: "Tourism - celebrating diversity". In the message, dated 24 June, Archbishop
Antonio Maria Veglio and Archbishop Agostino Marchetto, respectively president and
secretary of the council, write: "Diversity is a fact, a reality, - the document reads
- but, as Pope Benedict XVI reminds us, it is also a positive factor, something good,
and not a threat or a danger, up to the point that the Holy Father wants “people not
only [to] accept the existence of other cultures but also desire to be enriched by
them”
“In positively evaluating what is different, - continues the Message
- we note a contradiction. On one hand we observe that in this time of globalization,
cultures and religions approach each other more and more, and that in the heart of
all cultures, an authentic desire for peace is emerging. On the other hand, we see
misunderstandings, prejudices and deeply rooted misconceptions that raise barriers
and nurture divisions. This is the fear that is in us of what is different, unknown.
We must therefore do everything we can to transform discrimination, xenophobia
and intolerance into understanding and mutual acceptance, through the roads of respect,
education and open, constructive and binding dialogue”.
From this perspective,
tourism is also “an occasion for dialogue and listening, inasmuch as it puts people
in contact with other ways of living, other religions, other ways of seeing the world
and its history. It is likewise an invitation not to withdraw into one’s own culture,
but to be open and face different ways of thinking and living. It should not be surprising,
therefore, that extremist sectors and terrorist groups of a fundamentalist nature
indicate tourism as a danger and an objective to destroy. Mutual knowledge – let us
ardently hope – will help in building a more just, supportive and fraternal society”.
“People’s initial experience regarding diversity takes place today also in the
virtual world, a cosmic megalopolis permanently offered to everyone. Thanks to this
first form of “tourism”, which is virtual and kinematic, diversity is observed at
a close range, facilitating a proximity of the different one who is distant. It is
this “tourism” that first celebrates diversity. However, it is above all tourism
understood as a physical mobility, that underlines natural, ecological, social, cultural,
patrimonial and religious diversity. It also allows us to discover the work done together,
cooperation among peoples, unity among human beings in the magnificent and disturbing
diversity of its achievements”.
“All this requires an effort, both on the
part of the visitors and of the local residents who welcome, to assume an attitude
of openness, respect, nearness, trust in such a way that, motivated by their desire
to meet others, respecting their personal, cultural and religious diversity, they
will be open to dialogue and understanding”.
“The foundation of diversity
lies in the mystery of God. The Word that creates is at the origin of the richness
of the species, particularly of him/her who is the “image and likeness” of God. This
poetical biblical Word is diversity, source of the identity of every creature, since
the Creator was the first to contemplate the beauty-goodness of everything that He
made (cf. Gen 1). And God is also that wonderful force which is the principle of unity
of all differences, seen as a “manifestation of the Spirit … given for some benefit
(1 Cor 12:7). In contemplating diversity, the human person discovers traces of the
divine in the footprints of what is human. And for the believer, differences as a
whole open ways by which one can draw near the infinite greatness of God. As a phenomenon
having the possibility of celebrating diversity, tourism, for us, can be Christian,
an open road to contemplative confession”.