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Mr President,
Mr Director General,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
As
you gather for the Thirty-fourth
Conference of the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations, I am pleased to
welcome you to the Vatican. Our
meeting today is part of a tradition
reaching back to the time when your
Organization first set up its
headquarters in Rome. I am happy to
have yet another occasion to express
appreciation for your work to
eliminate the scourge of global
hunger.
As you know, the Holy See has
always maintained a keen interest in
every effort made to rid the human
family of famine and malnutrition,
in the awareness that resolving
these problems requires not only
extraordinary dedication and highly
refined technical training, but
above all a genuine spirit of
cooperation uniting all men and
women of good will.
This noble goal calls for
unwavering acknowledgement of the
inherent dignity of the human person
at every stage of life. All forms of
discrimination, and particularly
those that thwart agricultural
development, must be rejected since
they constitute a violation of the
basic right of every person to be
"free from hunger". These
convictions are in fact demanded by
the very nature of your work on
behalf of the common good of
humanity, as expressed so eloquently
by your motto -- fiat panis -- words
that are also at the heart of the
Gospel which the Church is called to
proclaim.
The data gathered through your
research and the extent of your
programmes for supporting the global
endeavour to develop the world’s
natural resources clearly testify to
one of the most troubling paradoxes
of our time: the relentless spread
of poverty in a world that is also
experiencing unprecedented
prosperity, not only in the economic
sphere but also in the rapidly
developing fields of science and
technology.
The obstacles standing in the
way of overcoming this tragic
situation can at times be
discouraging. Armed conflicts,
outbreaks of disease, adverse
atmospheric and environmental
conditions and the massive forced
displacement of peoples: all these
obstacles should serve as a
motivation to redouble our efforts
to provide each person with his or
her daily bread. For her part, the
Church is convinced that the quest
for more effective technical
solutions in an ever-changing and
expanding world calls for
far-sighted programmes embodying
enduring values grounded in the
inalienable dignity and rights of
the human person.
FAO continues to play an
essential role in relieving world
hunger, while reminding the
international community of the
pressing need constantly to update
methods and to design strategies
adequate to today’s challenges. I
express my appreciation for the
generous efforts made in this regard
by all associated with your
Organization. The Holy See has
closely followed the activities of
FAO over the last sixty years and is
confident that the significant
results already achieved will
continue. FAO was one of the first
international organizations with
which the Holy See established
regular diplomatic relations. On 23
November 1948, during the Fourth
Session of your Conference, the Holy
See was granted the unique status of
"Permanent Observer", thus ensuring
its right to participate in the
activities of FAO’s various
departments and affiliated agencies
in a way consonant with the Church’s
religious and moral mission.
The united effort of the
international community to eliminate
malnutrition and promote genuine
development necessarily calls for
clear structures of management and
oversight, and a realistic
assessment of the resources needed
to address a wide range of different
situations. It requires the
contribution of every member of
society -- individuals, volunteer
organizations, businesses, and local
and national governments -- always
with due regard for those ethical
and moral principles which are the
common patrimony of all people and
the foundation of all social life.
The international community must
always avail itself of this precious
treasure of common values since
genuine and lasting development can
only be furthered in a spirit of
cooperation and a willingness to
share professional and technical
resources.
Indeed, today more than ever,
the human family needs to find the
tools and strategies capable of
overcoming the conflicts caused by
social differences, ethnic
rivalries, and the gross disparity
in levels of economic development.
Mankind is thirsting for true and
lasting peace -- a peace that can
only come about if individuals,
groups at every level, and
government leaders cultivate habits
of responsible decision-making
rooted firmly in the fundamental
principles of justice. It is
therefore essential that societies
dedicate their energies to educating
authentic peacemakers: this is a
task which falls in a particular way
to organizations like your own,
which cannot fail to recognize as
the foundation of authentic justice
the universal destination of the
goods of creation.
Religion, as a potent
spiritual force for healing the
wounds of conflict and division, has
its own distinctive contribution to
make in this regard, especially
through the work of forming minds
and hearts in accordance with a
vision of the human person.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
technical progress, important as it
is, is not everything. Such progress
must be placed within the wider
context of the integral good of the
human person. It must constantly
draw nourishment from the common
patrimony of values which can
inspire concrete initiatives aimed
at a more equitable distribution of
spiritual and material goods. As I
wrote in my encyclical "Deus Caritas
Est," "those who are in a position
to help others will realize that, in
doing so, they themselves receive
help; being able to help others is
no merit or achievement of their
own" (No. 35). This principle has a
special application to the world of
agriculture, in which the work of
those who are often considered the
"lowliest" members of society should
be duly acknowledged and esteemed.
FAO’s outstanding activity on
behalf of development and food
security clearly points to the
correlation between the spread of
poverty and the denial of basic
human rights, beginning with the
fundamental right to adequate
nutrition. Peace, prosperity, and
respect for human rights are
inseparably linked. The time has
come to ensure, for the sake of
peace, that no man, woman and child
will ever be hungry again!
Dear friends, in renewing my
esteem for your work, I assure you
of my prayers that Almighty God will
enlighten and guide your
deliberations, so that the activity
of FAO will respond ever more fully
to the human family’s yearning for
solidarity, justice and peace.
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Editrice Vaticana