August 2, 2008
Beyond Condoms in
the AIDS Debate
Interview With Caritas Expert on HIV
By Karna Swanson
MEXICO CITY, JULY 31, 2008 (Zenit.org).- Teaching abstinence outside
marriage and fidelity within has been proved to be much more
effective in decreasing the spread of HIV than simply distributing
condoms, according to the special advisor on HIV for Caritas
Internationalis.
Monsignor Robert Vitillo, who will participate in the XVII
International AIDS Conference, to be held Aug. 3-8 in Mexico City,
adds that unfortunately, abstinence and infidelity are not given the
attention they deserve among experts and researchers.
Some 25,000 experts, physicians, activists and decision-makers from
around the world are expected to attend the conference organized by
the International AIDS Society, which has at its theme "Universal
Action Now."
Caritas Internationalis sponsored a pre-conference seminar Wednesday
for Caritas participants from Latin America, and on Aug. 5, together
with the Jesuits of Mexico and the Catholic HIV and AIDS Network, it
will host delegates from Catholic organizations in an evening of
prayer and discussion.
In this interview with ZENIT, Monsignor Vitillo shares what he sees
as the Church's role in fighting the spread of the AIDS virus, and
the role of faith-based organizations at the conference.
Q: You say a major challenge the Church faces with regards to AIDS
is ignorance of what the Church is doing to fight it. What is the
Church doing? What is unique about the Church's approach?
Monsignor Vitillo: As I have been privileged to witness the response
of the Catholic Church to the HIV pandemic on literally every
continent, I have noted that the Church's response is very
consistent with its overall mission:
-- To teach people both about the facts related to this pandemic,
and about the permanent values that should be the foundation of our
response. This includes both how to prevent the further spread of
HIV -- by observing sexual abstinence outside marriage and
life-long, mutual fidelity within marriage -- and how we should
respond to those already living with or affected by the virus --
with acceptance, love, and solidarity, and without discrimination,
rejection, or stigmatization.
-- To serve people. Here the Caritas organizations at the regional,
national, diocesan and parish levels have played -- and continue to
do so -- an important role in organizing and replicating health
care, social services, emotional support, income-generation
activities, orphan care, advocacy and self-help programs for and
with persons living with or affected by HIV.
In addition to Caritas, there are many other Catholic organizations
working to help those affected by HIV.
-- To provide pastoral care to persons living with or affected by
HIV.
Many people who know firsthand the impact of the virus are searching
to deepen their relationship with God, especially as they face the
challenge which HIV has posed to them and/or to their loved ones.
They also desperately want to understand that this virus has not
been sent as a "punishment from God" -- a number of bishops'
conferences, as well as Pope John Paul II, addressed this issue very
clearly by explaining that, according to Catholic doctrine, God does
not "punish" people by sending them illnesses.
Q: Last week 50 Catholic groups asked Benedict XVI to lift the
Church's ban on artificial contraception, and accused the Church's
stance of having "catastrophic effects" in the spread of AIDS. Does
the Church's position against condoms constitute an obstacle against
fighting AIDS?
Monsignor Vitillo: I would like to slightly transpose this question
in order to emphasize my strong conviction that the Church's
teaching, which insists on sexual abstinence outside marriage and
lifelong, mutual fidelity within marriage, is indeed scientifically
valid and has offered evidence-based proof that people who observe
such behavior have been able to prevent the spread of HIV.
Studies in countries where the HIV prevalence rate has been
decreased in recent years, such as Uganda, Kenya, and Thailand,
indicate that people in these countries were more disposed to reduce
the number of their sexual partners and/or to delay the onset of
sexual activity than to adopt the use of condoms.
Such behaviors -- reduction of sexual partners and delay of onset of
sexual activity -- are much closer to the Church's teaching on
sexuality and on prevention of HIV and other sexually transmitted
infections than is an exclusive focus on condom promotion.
Regrettably, however, many scientists, HIV prevention educators, and
AIDS activists are so fixed on condom promotion that they do not
give due attention to the risk avoidance that is possible to achieve
through abstinence outside marriage and mutual, lifelong fidelity
within marriage.
I believe that the Church does a great service to HIV prevention
efforts by focusing on risk avoidance and on deeper and
longer-lasting behavior change that is necessary to make a
significant impact on reducing -- and, hopefully, stopping -- the
further transmission of HIV.
Q: Will faith-based organizations have a strong voice at this
international conference, or is the work of these organizations seen
as being on the margin?
Monsignor Vitillo: In recent international conferences on AIDS, the
voice of faith-based organizations has grown stronger, but there
always is room for improvement in this regard.
For the past several International AIDS Conferences, the Ecumenical
Advocacy Alliance (EAA), based in Geneva, has made efforts to
organize an ecumenical pre-conference. This year, in Mexico City,
the EAA has some 450 registered participants for the pre-conference
that will be held from July 31 to Aug. 2.
The EAA also organizes an inter-faith exhibit booth at which many
organizations -- Christian, Muslim, Buddhist, Jewish and others --
exhibit their resources. Because this is a joint effort, the booth
is large enough to "compete" with pharmaceutical companies, large
governmental displays, etc., for the attention of the some 25,000
participants in the International AIDS Conference.
There have been efforts by some of the conference organizers,
including the International AIDS Society, to include the voices of
religious leaders and of those working with faith-based
organizations.
Regrettably, for some groups, including some particularly aggressive
activist groups, faith-based organizations represent an obstacle to
an effective AIDS response. I believe that such thinking is deeply
flawed and fails to recognize the crucial and life-saving response
to AIDS that is embodied in the faith-based efforts.
Some of these groups receive substantial funding from foundations,
and even from some governments, that attempt to promote a
relativist, secular agenda in the world.
And these groups sponsor few, if any, direct services to those
living with or affected by the virus, even though they represent
themselves as the "voice" of people so affected. They certainly
don't represent the majority of poor and marginalized people who
very much appreciate the engagement of churches and faith-based
organizations in the global response to AIDS.
I believe that we need to engage such negative "voices" in
respectful dialogue, but, at the same time, we must stay focused on
the activities that will have the greatest impact on the lives of
those who know firsthand the impact of HIV in their lives.
Q: Is there a divide between faith-based and secular organizations,
or do they work together? Do faith-based organizations face any
extra challenges?
Monsignor Vitillo: There certainly is positive experience and much
more potential for faith-based and secular organizations to work
together on those efforts for which they share common values and
strategies.
For example, in June 2007, Caritas Internationalis and the Unions of
Superiors General jointly sponsored a Night of Solidarity -- an
initiative of the World AIDS Campaign -- to promote universal access
to anti-retroviral medications.
As another example, Caritas Internationalis and the Catholic
HIV/AIDS Network plan to join the "Making Medicines Child-Sized"
advocacy campaign of the World Health Organization to promote
medicines, including anti-retroviral medications, that are better
adapted for use among children.
I believe that faith-based organizations face some particular
challenges related to such collaboration:
-- Many secular groups are not accustomed to working with
faith-based organizations. The Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance recently
published a manual titled "Building Better Partnerships" to assist
such groups to understand better the major faith traditions, the
values that undergird their beliefs and actions, and the strategies
employed by them in responding to AIDS.
-- Faith-based groups must exercise particular caution to avoid
compromising their beliefs and values when they engage in such
collaboration with secular groups, and must be careful to avoid
creating any scandal through such collaboration.
-- Such collaboration may require that faith-based and secular
groups "agree to disagree" on certain issues and make special
efforts to respect each other without compromising their own basic
identity and values.
Q: What is the message Caritas brings to the table at this
conference? Conversely, what is Caritas hoping to take away?
Monsignor Vitillo: Caritas participants bring many gifts and skills,
as well as needs, to the table of the International AIDS Conference.
First of all, we must remember that Caritas is rooted in Catholic
teaching, especially in the social doctrine of the Church. That
teaching brings us a vision of the whole person, created in the
image of God, gifted with a God-given, unique and irrevocable
dignity.
Catholic doctrine also reminds us that, as a Church, we are a
community and must act as a leaven to help people, especially those
who are most poor, vulnerable and marginalized, to develop
themselves, even as we look forward to the fulfillment of our
development at the end of our earthly lives and at the end of this
world.
This vision is beautifully articulated in "Deus Caritas Est," the
first encyclical of our Holy Father, Benedict XVI. The Confederation
of Caritas Internationalis has studied and continues to reflect on
this encyclical with particular care and attention, and we bring
that reflection to all our responses to the world social challenges
and natural and human-made emergencies, including that of the HIV
pandemic.
This equips us to bring to the International AIDS Conference a
desire to identify more than technical or temporary solutions to
this pandemic and, alternatively, to identify solutions based on
values and on long-term behavior change on the level of
relationships between individuals and in society as a whole.
For the past 20 years our confederation has joined other Catholic
organizations in sharing both our learning and experience in
responding to HIV and in advocating for more just policies and
solutions to problems related to this pandemic. I think that we will
have more participants from Catholic organizations than at previous
conferences, so I hope we can make our presence known and
appreciated.
Finally, I think that I can speak for other Caritas participants
when I say that we hope to learn more -- the current scientific
evidence related to the pandemic, projections for the future,
effective strategies for prevention, care, support, and treatment.
Of course, we will need to assess such strategies from the "lens" of
our Catholic values and teaching.
And we wish to deepen our appreciation for the firsthand experience
of those who live with or have been affected directly by HIV, and to
engage them more actively in our Caritas-sponsored responses to the
pandemic.
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