(Vatican Radio) Cardinal Peter Turkson on Tuesday highlighted the importance of religious
freedom saying "It is important to preserve and defend religious freedom because it
concerns “each person's freedom to live according to their own deeper understanding
of the truth.”
Cardinal Turkson, Pesident of the Pontifical Council for Justice
and Peace, was speaking at a conference entitled “The Church and Human Rights,” taking
place in Bratislava, on the initiative of the Slovakian Bishops’ Conference.
In
his address, Cardinal Turkson said, “freedom of religion is inseparable from freedom
of thought and conscience” and includes “the freedom to change one’s religion or belief”
and “the freedom to manifest that religion or belief both in private and communally.”
This freedom, the Cardinal said, is not always recognized and protected. “At
present, Christians are the religious group which suffers persecution in the largest
number of countries on account of its faith,” a situation that “constitutes a grave
violation of human rights.” He appealed to all governments to protect the rights of
their citizens, “whatever their religion.”
Cardinal Turkson has also pointed
to two particular challenges that religion faces today. On the one hand, he said,
secularism, “wants to reduce religion to a purely private concern.” On the other hand,
“extreme forms of fundamentalism” are not religion, “but a falsification of religion”
because they are opposed to “reconciliation and the establishment of God’s peace.”
“What kind of change is needed for human rights to be better protected and
upheld in all parts of the world?” the Cardinal asked. “Religious education,” he said,
“is of inestimable value in this regard.” He quoted Pope Benedict XVI, who in his
Message for the World Day of Peace of 2011, called it “the ‘highway’ that leads new
generations to see others as their brothers and sisters . . . members of the one human
family, from which no one is to be excluded.”
The Church, Cardinal Turkson
said, “affirms the foundation of fundamental human rights in human dignity and therefore
defends the universal character of these basic rights.” For this reason, he warned
against “This relativistic conception restricts the range of application of rights
because it permits the meaning and interpretation of rights to vary and their universality
to be denied in the name of different cultural, political, social and even religious
outlooks.” At the same time , the Cardinal expressed concern “ideologies that attempt
to rewrite human rights or create new ones.” He gave as examples the promotion of
so-called “reproductive rights;” of euthanasia, even for minors; of ideological redefinitions
of “gender,” with the related attempts to redefine marriage. “Such positions distort
reality because they attempt to rewrite human nature, which de natura cannot be rewritten.”
Cardinal
Turkson noted that “the Church is a vigorous partner in efforts to make human rights
a reality.” So, he said, “we should not be surprised that the Catholic Church regularly
affirms the inherent dignity of the person as the foundation of human rights, and
the right to life from conception to natural death as the first among all human rights
and the condition for all other rights of the person.”
Below, please find the
complete text of Cardinal Peter Turkson’s address to the Conference on Human Rights:
The Catholic Church and Human Rights
Cardinal Peter K.A. Turkson President
In
the name of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, I congratulate the Slovak
Bishops’ Conference for the initiative to hold this conference on the Church and human
rights.
Ever since the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace began its
work, soon after the Second Vatican Council, the promotion and protection of human
rights have been essential components of our mandate.
So thank you for the
opportunity to explore with you some of the ways in which the Catholic Church teaches,
promotes and protects human rights.
Introduction
After the 1948 Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Blessed John XXIII and his successors have developed
the Church’s social doctrine in the area of human rights. The Church affirms the foundation
of fundamental human rights in human dignity and therefore defends the universal character
of these basic rights. The Church rejects the relativism that some national regimes
and interest groups increasingly apply to rights.
In his first World Day of
Peace Message, Pope Francis expressed this deep regret: “In many parts of the world,
there seems to be no end to grave offences against fundamental human rights, especially
the right to life and the right to religious freedom.”
Violence against religion
is suffered disproportionately by Christians. The Church urges that religious freedom
be treasured and defended by all, whatever their own convictions, because it epitomizes
the freedom to live by one’s deepest understanding of truth.
As Pope Benedict
XVI explained, this is consistent with the healthy secularity of the legitimate modern
State in which religious and temporal matters are separate. But such freedom is opposed
by the aggressive secularism that attacks any beliefs that it does not share, and
by some religious fundamentalists with the same tendencies.
Inherent Dignity
of the Human Person
Many people speak of human rights. Very rightly, they refer
to their violations. Very rightly, they proclaim that human rights must be protected.
Very rightly, they advocate that human rights must be promoted. Yet what are the human
rights we are talking about?
In order to have a well-grounded sense of this
subject, let us recall what led the United Nations to issue the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948.
The Second World War had still not ended when
the United Nations was founded in 1945. In some areas, wars continued. The drafters
of the Universal Declaration were well aware of the countless grave violations of
human rights that had been committed especially in the two World Wars. Member States
were in agreement that a blatant disregard and contempt for human rights had resulted
in barbarous acts which outraged the conscience of mankind.
For this reason,
Member States desired a bold agreement: a consensus document that would proclaim to
the world those values that are common to all of humanity. Thus, soon after the birth
of the United Nations, Member States issued the Universal Declaration “as a common
standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations.”
I draw your attention
to the words “common standard of achievement”. This text was to enshrine the aspiration
to which every person and every organ of society should subscribe.
With this
aspiration in mind, what do we mean? To what should all humankind aspire? Rather than
enumerate rights and freedoms, I invite you to focus on their foundation.
The
first sentence of the Preamble of the Universal Declaration states: “Whereas recognition
of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of
the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world.” That
is, the ground, the foundation, the substrate of human rights and freedoms is “the
inherent dignity of the human person”.
This dignity is perceived and understood
first of all by reason. It is not found in the human will or in the reality of the
State or in public powers. It is found in the human person himself and in God his
Creator. The philosopher Jacques Maritain, who helped to draft the Universal Declaration,
put this point succinctly when he wrote:
the worth of the person, his liberty,
his rights arise from the order of naturally sacred things which bear upon them the
imprint of the Father of Being and which have in him the goal of their movement. A
person possesses absolute dignity because he is in direct relationship with the Absolute,
in which alone he can find his complete fulfilment.
This is utterly radical.
Your human rights and mine do not depend upon the will of other people. Human rights
arise from our dignity as created in the image and likeness of God. Thus we should
not be surprised that the Catholic Church regularly affirms the inherent dignity of
the person as the foundation of human rights, and the right to life from conception
to natural death as the first among all human rights and the condition for all other
rights of the person.
“The dignity of the human person and the common good
rank higher than the comfort of those who refuse to renounce their privileges,” Pope
Francis teaches. “When these values are threatened, a prophetic voice must be raised.”
Therefore the Church is a vigorous partner in efforts to make human rights a reality.
Touchstones
of Human Rights
In the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, human
rights are described as universal, inalienable and inviolable.
Human rights
have these three characteristics not by human dictate or even universal democratic
agreement. Rather they stem from the deepest “foundation stone” of divinely-given
human dignity. From this comes the natural vocation of all men and women to transcend
themselves. The deep yearning for transcendence can never be extinguished. It will
always surface in efforts towards achieving the common good and peace.
Human
rights are universal in that they apply to all humans without exception of time, place
or subject, as the Vienna Declaration states: “The universal nature of these rights
and freedoms is beyond question.” They are inviolable insofar as they are inherent
in the human person and in human dignity, and because the proclamation of these rights
demands their complete respect by all people everywhere and for all people everywhere.
Finally, these rights are inalienable insofar as no one can legitimately deprive others
of these rights, whoever they may be, since this would do violence to their nature.
In
his 2008 visit to the General Assembly of the United Nations, Pope Benedict XVI reiterated
this truth. He noted how “human rights” has grown as the common language and the ethical
substratum of international relations. However, he warned against the ideology of
relativism. Relativism removes these rights from their proper context because it implies
that rights are not based on the natural law inscribed on our hearts and thus not
present in all cultures and civilizations.
This relativistic conception restricts
the range of application of rights because it permits the meaning and interpretation
of rights to vary and their universality to be denied in the name of different cultural,
political, social and even religious outlooks.
Quite to the contrary, a great
variety of viewpoints must not be allowed to obscure the basic truth: rights are universal,
and so too is the human person who is the subject of these rights. The fact that there
are unchanging values common to all of humanity means quite simply that human rights
are a given. They are common to all persons. They do not depend upon the fashions
and trends of societies or on the will of governments. In everyday terms, this means
that everyone has them; no one can lose or misplace them; and they cannot legitimately
be denied or removed.
On the sixtieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration,
at the United Nations in Geneva, the Holy See drew attention to another cause for
concern: ideologies that attempt to rewrite human rights or create new ones. Perhaps
proponents are misled by the fact that fundamental rights can be expressed in different
particular manners in different social and cultural contexts. A “healthy realism”
will recognize that this variation is compatible with the universal character of the
underlying rights, and it will block the misguided proliferation of pretended rights:
A
healthy realism, therefore, is the foundation of human rights, that is, the acknowledgement
of what is real and inscribed in the human person and in creation. When a breach is
caused between what is claimed and what is real through the search of so-called “new”
human rights, a risk emerges to reinterpret the accepted human rights vocabulary to
promote mere desires and measures that, in turn, become a source of discrimination
and injustice and the fruit of self-serving ideologies.
The Church has a serious
concern when the ideology of a particular group of individuals can somehow create
a new human right. One example is the attempt on the part of some to legitimize the
killing of an unborn child through the promotion of so-called “reproductive rights”,
“reproductive services” and other loaded terms which mask the tragedy of abortion.
Euthanasia, according to some, should also be a human right, and not only
for adults! For the first time in history, in February 2014, the Belgian parliament
accepted the principle that even a child, with no limit of minimum age, could ask
to be killed to end his/her suffering. "This law – the Bishops of Belgium wrote --
opens the doors to the extension of euthanasia to the handicapped, the demented, the
mentally ill and eventually to those who are tired of life.” Jean Vanier, the founder
of L’Arche, said it is urgent to rediscover how to support the vulnerable people around
us so that our society can once again call itself “human society”.
Another
example is the use of the term “gender” to suggest that sex is not biologically grounded
as male and female but is simply a social construct or produced by what individuals
think or feel they are. Moreover, attempts to recognize those engaging in homosexual
behaviour as a specific group to be accorded human rights go beyond the protection
to be guaranteed to all people under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Related
to this is the suggestion that marriage could somehow be redefined, despite the fact
that marriage is, by nature, between one man and one woman for their mutual love and
increase of the human family, as affirmed in international law. Such positions distort
reality because they attempt to rewrite human nature, which de natura cannot be rewritten.
As
Cardinal Francis George of Chicago stated with great clarity, “The nature of marriage
is not a religious question. Marriage comes to us from nature. Christ sanctifies marriage
as a sacrament for the baptized, giving it significance beyond its natural reality;
the State protects marriage because it is essential to family and to the common good
of society. But neither Church nor State invented marriage, and neither can change
its nature.”
In this context, the Church vigorously upholds the rights to life
and bodily security of everyone, everyone, regardless of their perceived “sexual differences.”
The Church sees this as a matter of the most basic rights. Homosexual persons “must
be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity. Every sign of unjust discrimination
in their regard should be avoided.”
Thus, while the Church regrets the discordance
between homosexual behaviour as such and what we understand as the norm for God-given
human nature, she upholds the integrity of everyone’s rights. See our Lord’s reaction
when the townspeople wished to stone a woman to death for adultery: He managed to
preserve her life and bodily security (John 8:1-11).
Religious Freedom
Let
me now focus on one fundamental right, namely, religious freedom.
The Universal
Declaration of 1948 already upheld freedom of religion as one of the fundamental human
rights inherent in every person. As it states, “Everyone has the right to freedom
of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion
or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or
private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”
Let me repeat: the right to freedom of religion is inseparable from freedom
of thought and conscience. It applies to everyone. It includes the freedom to change
one’s religion or belief. It also includes the freedom to manifest that religion or
belief both in private and communally.
Less than two decades later, the Fathers
of the Second Vatican Council affirmed these same principles in Dignitatis humanae,
the Declaration on Religious Liberty. They specified that the right of the individual
and of communities to social and civil freedom in religious matters carries with it
the right “to be immune from coercion on the part of individuals or of social groups
and of any human power, in such wise that no one is to be forced to act in a manner
contrary to his own beliefs, whether privately or publicly, whether alone or in association
with others, within due limits.” In addition, they pointed out that
It is in
accordance with their dignity as persons – that is, beings endowed with reason and
free will and therefore privileged to bear personal responsibility – that all men
should be at once impelled by nature and also bound by a moral obligation to seek
the truth, especially religious truth. They are also bound to adhere to the truth,
once it is known, and to order their whole lives in accord with the demands of truth.
However, people cannot discharge these obligations consistently with their own nature
unless they enjoy immunity from external coercion as well as psychological freedom.
Therefore the right to religious freedom has its foundation not in the subjective
disposition of the person, but in his very nature.
One year after the promulgation
of Dignitatis humanae, the UN General Assembly adopted the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Happily, Article 18 of this Covenant restated
and expanded upon the principle of religious freedom as contained in the Universal
Declaration. The Covenant affirmed that:
no one should be subject to coercion
that would impair his freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice;
freedom
to manifest one’s religion or beliefs may be subject only to such limitations as are
prescribed by law and are necessary to protect public safety, order, health, or morals
or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others; and
States Parties are called
to respect the liberty of parents to ensure the religious and moral education of their
children in conformity with their own convictions.
Moreover, the ICCPR also
affirmed the right of minorities to profess and practice their own religion.
In
1991, Blessed John Paul called religious freedom “the source and synthesis” of all
the basic human rights. He defined religious freedom as “the right to live in the
truth of one's faith and in conformity with one's transcendent dignity as a person.”
Present-day
Challenges to Religious Freedom
The principle of freedom of religion is enshrined
in international human rights law. One of the great tragedies of today is that it
is not upheld in all countries and by all governments.
Pope Benedict drew attention
to this grave situation in his 2011 Message for the World Day of Peace. He observed
that in some areas of the world, to profess one’s religion endangers one’s life and
personal liberty. In other areas there are more subtle and sophisticated forms of
prejudice and hostility towards believers and religious symbols. At present, Christians
are the religious group which suffers persecution in the largest number of countries
on account of its faith. They experience daily affronts and often live in fear because
of their faith in Christ, their pursuit of truth, and their plea for respect for religious
freedom. This situation constitutes a grave violation of human rights and must be
confronted on all levels. Governments have a responsibility to their people, whatever
their religion, to protect them from violations of their human rights, including their
right to freedom of religion.
Moreover, as Pope Benedict XVI pointed out during
his Apostolic Journey to Lebanon in September 2012, for the right to religious freedom
to be upheld, it must also be preserved free from two opposed trends today that run
contrary to freedom of religion. These are extreme and negative forms of secularization,
and a violent fundamentalism that claims to be based on religion.
Pope Benedict
decried the secularism that wants to reduce religion to a purely private concern,
and that sees personal or family worship as unrelated to daily life, ethics or one’s
relationships with others. Further, secularism gives the State control over religious
expression and denies citizens the right to express their religion openly. By contrast,
“secularity” is a positive orientation. It “frees religion from the encumbrance of
politics”; it maintains
the necessary distance, clear distinction and necessary
collaboration between the two spheres. […] No society can develop in a healthy way
without embodying a spirit of mutual respect between politics and religion [… while
they] cooperate harmoniously in the service of the common good. This kind of healthy
secularity ensures that political activity does not manipulate religion, while the
practice of religion remains free from a politics of self-interest which at times
is barely compatible with, if not downright contradictory to, religious belief.
The
other problem is extreme forms of fundamentalism. Pope Benedict explains how this
phenomenon arises from
“economic and political instability, a readiness on
the part of some to manipulate others, and a defective understanding of religion.
[It] afflicts all religious communities and denies their long-standing tradition of
co-existence. It wants to gain power, at times violently, over individual consciences,
and over religion itself, for political reasons”.
It follows “a logic opposed
to divine logic, in other words, not by teaching and practicing love and respect for
freedom but rather by intolerance and violence”. This is not religion but a falsification
of religion, for religion in its essence seeks reconciliation and the establishment
of God’s peace throughout the world. Religions are therefore called to cleanse themselves
from such temptations and to illumine and purify consciences.
Religious
Education for Building the Social Order
What kind of change is needed for human
rights to be better protected and upheld in all parts of the world? “Religious education”
is of inestimable value in this regard. Pope Benedict has called it the “highway”
that leads new generations to see others as their brothers and sisters – as brothers
and sisters with whom they are called to work and to journey – as brothers and sisters
who know that they are members of the one human family, from which no one is to be
excluded.
Allow me to provide a powerful expression of this one human family.
In September 2010 it was my honour to lead the Holy See delegation at the Plenary
Session of the United Nations General Assembly. The topic was poverty and development.
I pointed out that development is seriously undermined by irresponsible governments,
global processes and major institutions when their policies and actions fail to uphold
the inherent and equal dignity, the individuality, and the transcendence of every
human being. The methods of some anti-poverty campaigns tended to target the poor
in ways that suggest that the solution to global poverty is to eliminate the poor.
Furthermore, material poverty has partners – relational, emotional, and spiritual
poverty.
So we reminded the General Assembly that the human person must be
at the centre in our quest for development. To combat global poverty requires justice
and solidarity in the form of investments in the resourcefulness of the poor and,
far from eliminating them, making them protagonists in their emergence out of poverty.
The poor need education to be transformed from dependency to resourcefulness. If everyone’s
political, religious and economic rights and freedoms are respected, the paradigm
will shift from mere poverty management to wealth creation; from viewing the poor
not as a burden but as part of the solution.
Finally, we should not only recognize
that religious freedom is the source and synthesis of all human rights. We should
also recall what genuine religious belief contributes. Genuine religious belief points
us beyond present practicalities towards the transcendent; and it reminds us of the
possibility and the imperative of moral conversion of all persons, of the duty to
live peaceably with our neighbour, of the importance of living a life of integrity.
In the apt words of Jürgen Habermas, “Among the modern societies, only those that
are able to introduce into the secular domain the essential contents of their religious
traditions which point beyond the merely human realm will also be able to rescue the
substance of the human.” Properly understood, religious belief brings enlightenment;
it purifies our hearts and inspires noble and generous action to the benefit of the
entire human family; and it motivates us to cultivate the practice of virtue and to
reach out towards one another in love.
CONCLUSION
May God bless today’s
Conference with all the compassion, creative fidelity and courage necessary to make
human rights truly and really accessible for everyone throughout the world.
Moreover,
may today’s Conference encourage the Church in Slovakia in all that you are doing
to promote respect for human rights.
Let us make our own the hope of the Holy
Father, “that the daily commitment of all will continue to bear fruit,” and that all
God’s people may enjoy genuine peace “as a fundamental human right and a necessary
prerequisite for every other right.”
Vatican II, Gaudium et Spes, § 90;
Paul VI, Populorum Progressio, § 5; John Paul II, Pastor Bonus, §§ 142-44.
Pope
Francis, Message, World Day of Peace, 2014, § 1.
Cfr. Preamble of the
UDHR.
The San Francisco Conference which adopted the Charter of the
United Nations (25 June 1945) began its work on 25.041945. The UDHR was adopted on
10.12.1948.
Preamble of the UDHR.
General Assembly Resolution
217 A (III) of 10.12.1948 [emphasis added].
J. Maritain, The Rights
of Man and Natural Law, Ignatius Press 2011, p. 67.
Cfr. Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith, Instruction Donum vitae, 22.02.1987.
Pope
Francis, Evangelii Gaudium, § 218
Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action, 1993, A/CONF.157/23, OP1 and OP5.
Cfr Pontifical Council for
Justice and Peace, Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, Libreria Editrice
Vaticana, 2004, paragraph 153.
Benedict XVI, Address to the 62nd session
of the United Nations General Assembly, 2008.
Silvano M. Tomasi, Address
on the occasion of the commemoration of the 60th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, Geneva, 12.12.2008, 2.
Communiqué of Belgian Religious
Leaders on euthanasia, 6.11.2013. info.catho.be/2013/11/06/communique-des-chefs-religieux-en-belgique-au-sujet-de-leuthanasie/#.UwsjinmYbcs
Interview
by the network “Vivre dans la Dignité”, in « Des experts en humanité dénoncent le
Projet de loi 52 », 7.02.2014, on the blog vivredignite.blogspot.fr.
Cfr.
UDHR, Article 16; International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), Article
23, and International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), Article
10.
Francis George, “Legislation creating ‘same-sex’ marriage: What's
at stake?” Chicago: Catholic New World, 6-19.01.2013
See in 2009, ‘The
Vatican’s legal attaché to the United Nations issued a Dec. 10 statement saying the
Holy See continues to oppose «all grave violations» of homosexual persons’ human rights’,
at www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/holy_see_reiterates_opposition_to_vio- lation_of_homosexual_persons_human_rights.
See also: www.news. va/en/news/holy-see-addresses-un-human-rights-council-on-gend
www.zenit. org/rssenglish-32108.
Catechism of the Catholic Church, §
2358.
Cfr. Mark 10:6 as an expression of the natural created order.
UDHR,
Article 18.
Dignitatis humanae, § 2.
Ibid., 2.
ICCPR,
Article 18, 2-4.
Ibid., Article 27.
John Paul II, Centesimus
Annus, § 47.
Benedict XVI, Message, World Day of Peace, 2011, § 1.
‘Rising
Tide of Restrictions on Religion’, 20 September 2012, at www.pewforum. org/Government/Rising-Tide-of-Restrictions-on-Religion-findings.aspx.
See also www.theweeklynumber.com/1/post/2012/10/5-religious-groups-experience-4-year-high-in-harassment.html.
The
French notion of laicité.
See Benedict XVI, Post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation
Ecclesia in Medio Oriente, § 29. Cfr. Paul VI, Address to the Parliament of Uganda,
1.08.1969.
Ibid., § 30.
Benedict XVI, Homily opening II
Synod for Africa, 4.10.2009.
Benedict XVI, Message, the World Day of
Peace, 2011, § 4.
J. Habermas, An Awareness of What is Missing. Faith
and Reason in a Post-Secular Age, Cambridge 2010.
Cfr. Benedict XVI,
Address, St. Mary’s University College, Twickenham, 17.09.10.
Pope
Francis, Message, World Day of Peace, 2014, § 7.