Vatican
City, 28 May 2013 VIS – Bishop Mario Toso, S.D.B., secretary of the
Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, delivered an address at the
Conference on Tolerance and Non-Discrimination (Including Human
Rights Youth Education) in Tirana, Albania, on 21 May. The conference
was organized by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in
Europe (OSCE). The second plenary session dealt with the issue of
combating intolerance and discrimination against Christians and
members of other religions.
“At
the last High-Level Conference on tolerance and non-discrimination,
held three years ago in Astana,” the prelate said, “the
participating States committed, among other things, to counter
prejudice, discrimination, intolerance, and violence against
Christians and members of other religions, including minority
religions, which continue to be present in the OSCE region. They were
also called to address the denial of rights, exclusion, and
marginalization of Christians and members of other religions in our
societies. Unfortunately, examples of intolerance and discrimination
against Christians have not diminished but rather increased in
various parts of the OSCE region despite a number of meetings and
conferences on the subject organized also by the OSCE and Office for
Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR).”
“It
is regretful, therefore, to note that across the OSCE region a sharp
dividing line has been drawn between religious belief and religious
practice, so that Christians are frequently reminded in public
discourse (and increasingly even in the courts), that they can
believe whatever they like in their own homes or heads, and largely
worship as they wish in their own private churches, but they simply
cannot act on those beliefs in public. This is a only deliberate
twisting and limiting of what religious freedom actually means, and
it is not the freedom that was enshrined in international documents,
including those of the OSCE beginning with the 1975 Helsinki Final
Act, stretching through the 1989 Final Vienna Document and the 1990
Copenhagen Document, and including the 2010 Astana Summit
Commemorative Declaration.”
“Participating
OSCE States,” Bishop Toso emphasized, “must therefore guarantee
that intolerance and discrimination against Christians is ended,
enabling Christians to speak freely on issues that the government or
others may find disagreeable and act on their consciences in the
workplace and elsewhere. Discrimination against Christians – even
where they are a majority – must be faced as a serious threat to
the whole of society and therefore should be fought, as it is done,
and rightly so, in the case of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
No comments:
Post a Comment