Vatican City, 23 May 2015 (VIS) – The
Pope has sent a message of greetings and encouragement to the
participants in the Second International Conference on Women held in
Rome, and which today comes to an end. The event was organised by the
Pontifical Pontifical Council “Justice and Peace”, in cooperation
with the World Union of Women’s Catholic Organisations and the
World Women’s Alliance for Life and Family, on the theme “Women
and the post-2015 development agenda: the challenges of the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)”.
“Women face a variety of challenges
and difficulties in various parts of the world”, he writes. “In
the West, at times they still experience discrimination in the
workplace; they are often forced to choose between work and family;
they not infrequently suffer violence in their lives as fiancees,
wives, mothers, sisters and grandmothers. In poor and developing
countries, women bear the heaviest burdens: it is they who travel
many miles in search of water, who too often die in childbirth, who
are kidnapped for sexual exploitation or forced into marriages at a
young age or against their will. At times they are even denied the
right to life simply for being female. All of these problems are
reflected in the proposals for the post-2015 Development Agenda
currently being discussed in the United Nations.
“Issues relating to life are
intrinsically connected to social questions. When we defend the right
to life, we do so in order that each life – from conception to its
natural end – may be a dignified life, one free from the scourge of
hunger and poverty, of violence and persecution. Pope Benedict XVI,
in his encyclical Caritas in Veritate, highlighted how the Church
'forcefully maintains this link between life ethics and social
ethics, fully aware that a society lacks solid foundations when, on
the one hand, it asserts values such as the dignity of the person,
justice and peace, but then, on the other hand, radically acts to the
contrary by allowing or tolerating a variety of ways in which human
life is devalued and violated, especially where it is weak or
marginalised'.
“I encourage you, who are engaged in
defending the dignity of women and promoting their rights, to allow
yourselves to be constantly guided by the spirit of humanity and
compassion in the service of your neighbour. May your work be marked
first and foremost by professional competence, without self-interest
or superficial activism, but with generous dedication. In this way
you will manifest the countless God-given gifts which women have to
offer, encouraging others to promote sensitivity, understanding and
dialogue in settling conflicts big and small, in healing wounds, in
nurturing all life at every level of society, and in embodying the
mercy and tenderness which bring reconciliation and unity to our
world. All this is part of that 'feminine genius' of which our
society stands in such great need”.
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