Pope to all nations: Work to eradicate the scourge of hunger
By Deborah Castellano Lubov
All nations and the international community must commit themselves to eradicating the scourge of hunger.
Pope Francis made this appeal in the message he sent to participants in the UN's Food and Agricultural Organization's 43rd session taking place in Rome, 1 - 7 July 2023.
In the Pope's message, dated 1 July and written in Spanish, he cordially greeted all the conference's participants, and encouraged the FAO's Director-General to continue his commitment, "at a time when decisive and competent action to eradicate the scourge of hunger in the world is inescapable."
"The challenge we face," the Pope observed, "is joint and collaborative action by the entire family of nations."
Only if FAO and the other international organisations adopt and implement "a synergy of consensual and far-sighted thinking on the part of all the actors concerned," the Pope said, will they be effective in fulfilling their mandate.
This requires, he said, governments, businesses, academia, international institutions, civil society and individuals making "a joint effort" and "leaving aside petty logic and biased visions, so that everyone benefits, and no one is left behind."
Serious violations of human dignity
The Pope decried that millions of people worldwide continue to suffer from malnutrition, citing armed conflict and climate change, with its resulting natural disasters, as key culprits.
"Mass displacement, along with other effects of global political, economic and military tensions," he said, "undermine efforts to ensure that people's living conditions are improved on the basis of their inherent dignity."
The Pope acknowledged that experts say that the goal of 'Zero Hunger' will not be achieved within the timeframe set by the international community, and warned against letting this inability to meet common responsibilities, lead to revisions of programmes which "do not take into account the real needs of the people."
In this context, he called for always showing the utmost respect of and care for local communities, cultural diversity and traditional specificities, which, he stressed, "cannot be altered or destroyed in the name of a short-sighted idea of progress which, in reality, risks becoming synonymous with 'ideological colonisation.'"
Cannot impose from above
For this reason, the Pope insisted, interventions and projects must be planned and implemented in response to people and their communities' demands, which are not "imposed from above" nor "seeking their own interests" or "profit."
Appealing for all to do their part, the Holy Father reassured that the Holy See "will continue to offer its contribution to the common good," through the work and experience of the Catholic Church's institutions, "so that no one in our world lacks daily bread and our planet is given the protection it requires."
Pope Francis concluded praying that Almighty God richly bless FAO's labours and efforts "for the true progress of the whole human family."
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