Vatican
City, 3 April 2013
(VIS) – On the occasion of the celebration yesterday, 2 April, of
the Sixth World Autism Awareness Day, Archbishop Zygmunt Zimowski,
president of the Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers,
published the following message:
“Dearest
brothers and sisters, on the occasion of the Sixth World Autism
Awareness Day, which this year takes place during the liturgical
period of the Easter festivities, the Pontifical Council for Health
Care Workers intends to express the solicitude of the Church for
autistic people and their families, inviting Christian communities
and people of good will to express authentic solidarity towards
them.”
“I
would like to take as a point of departure for my reflections the
approach of Jesus who drew near to, and walked with, the disciples on
the way to Emmaus (cf. Lk 24:13-35). The look marked by loss, and
even more by amazement, that shaped the steps of Cleopas and Simon
could be a similar expression to—and equally similarly be found
within—that which marks the faces and the hearts of parents who
have a son or a daughter with autism.”
“Autism:
this is a word that still generates fear today even though in very
many cultures which traditionally excluded handicaps the ‘diversely
able’ have begun to be accepted socially, and many of the
prejudices that have surrounded people with disabilities and even
their parents have begun to be dismantled. To define someone as
autistic seems automatically to involve a negative judgement about
those who are afflicted by it, and, implicitly, a sentence involving
a definitive distancing from society. On the other hand, the person
concerned seems to be unable to communicate in a productive way with
other people, at times as though shut up in a ‘glass bell’, in
his or her impenetrable, but for us wonderful, interior universe.”
“This
is a ‘typical and stereotyped’ image of the autistic child which
requires profound revision. Ever since her birth, as a guiding theme,
the Church has always expressed her care for this aspect of medicine
through practical testimonies at a universal level. Above all else,
this is witness to Love beyond stigma, that social stigma that
isolates a sick person and makes him or her feel an extraneous body.
I am referring to that sense of loneliness that is often narrated
within modern society but which becomes even more present in modern
health care which is perfect in its ‘technical aspects’ but
increasingly deprived of, and not attentive to, that affective
dimension which should, instead, be the defining aspect of every
therapeutic act or pathway.”
“Faced
with the problems and the difficulties that these children and their
parents encounter, the Church with humility proposes the way of
service to the suffering brother, accompanying him with compassion
and tenderness on his tortuous human and psycho-relational journey,
and taking advantage of the help of parishes, of associations, of
Church movements and of men and women of good will.”
“Dear
brothers and sisters, setting oneself to listen must necessarily be
accompanied by an authentic fraternal solidarity. There should never
fail to be global care for the ‘frail’ person, as a person with
autism can be: this takes concrete form with that sense of nearness
that every worker, each according to his or her role, must know how
to transmit to the sick person and his or her family, not making that
person feel a number but making real the situation of a shared
journey that is made up of deeds, of attitudes and of words—perhaps
not dramatic ones but ones that suggest a daily life that is nearer
to normality. This means listening to the imperious exhortation that
we should not lose sight of the person in his or her totality: no
procedure, however perfect it may be, can be ‘effective’ if it is
deprived of the ‘salt’ of Love, of that Love that each one of
these sick people, if looked at in their eyes, asks of you. Their
smile, the serenity of a family that sees its loved one at the centre
of the complex organisation that each one of us, by our specific
tasks, is called to manage for his or her life, and perceived and
achieved sharing: this is the best ‘outcome’ that will enrich
us.”
“In
practice, this is a matter of welcoming autistic children in the
various sectors of social, educational, catechistic and liturgical
activity in a way that corresponds and is proportionate to their
capacity for relationships. Such solidarity, for those who have
received the gift of Faith, becomes a loving presence and
compassionate nearness for those who suffer, following the example
and in imitation of Jesus Christ, the Good Samaritan who by his
passion, death and resurrection redeemed humanity.”
“The
Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers, during the Year of Faith,
wishes to share with people who suffer because of autism the hope and
certainty that adherence to Love enables us to recognise the Risen
Christ every time that he makes himself our neighbour on the journey
of life. Let what John Paul II, in whose intercession we trust and
the eighth anniversary of whose return to the house of the Father we
remember specifically today, be a reference point for us: ‘The
quality of life in a community is measured largely by its commitment
to assist the weaker and needier members with respect for their
dignity as men and women. The world of rights cannot only be the
prerogative of the healthy. People with disabilities must also be
enabled to participate in social life as far as they can, and helped
to fulfil all their physical, psychological and spiritual potential.
Only by recognizing the rights of its weakest members can a society
claim to be founded on law and justice’ (John Paul II, Message on
the Occasion of the International Symposium on the Dignity and Rights
of the Mentally Disabled Person, 7-9 January 2004, n. 3).”
“May
what the Holy Father Francis observed during the first days of his
papacy—expressing his nearness to the sick and the suffering—be
constant light: ‘we must keep the thirst for the absolute alive in
the world, not allowing a one-dimensional vision of the human person
to prevail, according to which man is reduced to what he produces and
to what he consumes: this is one of the most dangerous snares of our
time’!”
“While
I hope for the cooperation of everyone in a choral and compassionate
answer to the numerous needs that come to us from our brothers and
sisters with autism and their families, I entrust the sufferings, the
joys and the hopes of these people to the mediation of Mary, Mother
of Christ and ‘Health of the Sick’ who, at the foot of the Cross,
taught us to pause beside all the crosses of contemporary Man (cf.
“Salvifici Doloris”, n. 31).”
“To
people with autism, to their families and to all those who are
involved in their service, while confirming my nearness and prayer, I
send my personal and affectionate best wishes for a serene and joyous
Easter with the Risen Lord.”
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