----------
Sent from my Nokia phone

------Original message------
From: John Ashworth <[email protected]>
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, May 11, 2012 6:45:22 PM GMT+0300
Subject: [sudan-john-ashworth] Reining in Caritas - Rome Reforms

Reining in Caritas - Rome reforms

Duncan MacLaren - 12 May 2012
The Tablet

It is one of the most important humanitarian groups in the world,
supported by legions of volunteers and donors. But now the Vatican has
moved to bring it further under control of Rome. One of Caritas’
former secretary generals explains how this could jeopardise the
organisation’s work

“Caritas Internationalis is confident in its future. Its mission to
fight against poverty and promote social justice has been renewed as a
service of the Catholic Church, and after several years of work on the
renovation of its statutes, all its efforts will now be focused on
this mission.” That is the official response from Caritas
Internationalis (CI), the confederation of all the 165 Caritas members
(including Cafod, Sciaf and Trócaire in England and Wales, Scotland
and Ireland, respectively) to the latest decrees from the Vatican
concerning its work. I wish it were true.

CI is one of the largest humanitarian, development and social-service
networks in the world. It has a staff of one million serving annually
24 million people and a collective income of US$5 billion (£3.1bn). It
is a ­democratic organisation, imbued with the principle of
subsidiarity. The role of the general secretariat is to serve the
members.
The latest decree and the new statutes and internal rules are the
result of Blessed Pope John Paul II’s 2004 chirografo (legal letter),
“During the Last Supper”, granting Caritas public juridical
personality under canon law. That status bolstered the standing of
Caritas within the structure of the Church. It would be difficult, for
example, for a bishops’ conference not to cooperate in setting up a
Caritas or participating in its response to a humani­tarian disaster
when Caritas was in such close communion with the Holy Father.

The new legal status made Caritas the prime Catholic agency for
humanitarian and development work. That has now been superseded by a
new general decree, issued by the Secretary of State, Cardinal
Tarcisio Bertone. It was meant to complement the chirografo. In fact,
it sweeps the chirografo away in a detailed exercise in bureaucratic
control.
In the chirografo, the role of the pontifical council Cor Unum, the
dicastery for charity, was to “follow and accompany” the activities of
CI (“seguire ed accompagnare le attività di CI”, in the original
Italian). Whereas before, the Holy See had the right to nominate an
ecclesiastical assistant, that is now the competence of Cor Unum. It
also has the power to approve agreements with non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), approve staff contracts, be involved in all
financial matters and even to ratify new members. Bizarrely, senior CI
staff will have to swear an oath of loyalty in front of the
dicastery’s president. Rather than “following and accompanying” the
work of CI, Cor Unum now exercises draconian control.

This is a dicastery which, during my time as secretary general
(1999-2007), was always invited to meetings and presented with our
information on humanitarian situations all over the world to keep it
informed. The communication was one-way and, despite our best efforts,
we had the feeling, not of being “accompanied”, but of being spied
upon. In writing new guidelines about cooperation in humanitarian
situations, a member of the Cor Unum staff was present throughout and
never opened his mouth because he was not a professional development
or aid worker. Now CI will have Cor Unum approving and ratifying
decisions on humanitarian and development matters when they lack the
expertise.

In 2005, Archbishop (now Cardinal) Paul Cordes, the then president of
Cor Unum, was invited to attend a Caritas meeting in Poland where the
seven Caritas regions were to express how they articulated their
Catholic identity within their own cultures. He said he had an urgent
meeting in Warsaw and would miss the Caritas Catholic identity
section. In fact, he spent three days with the Communion and
Liberation movement.

When Cardinal Cordes went to Pakistan for three days after an
earthquake, he wrote to me about changing the structure of our
committee, which was to oversee the humani­tarian response of the
confederation. He wanted a bishop as chairman, another bishop as
co-chairman and a layman as secretary. In fact, we had, as was usual,
consulted the Pakistani bishops’ conference and they supplied us with
qualified staff to represent the Pakistani Church and we added some of
our international experts as per our agreed guidelines. I phoned one
bishop who said he lived in a remote diocese and couldn’t meet every
day. I told Cardinal Cordes that this was an operational committee but
he told me months later that he had “never forgotten Pakistan”.

At the 2007 General Assembly, where Lesley-Anne Knight was elected as
CI secretary general, a Cor Unum official attempted to place her at
the back of the audience chamber minutes before Pope Benedict XVI was
due to come in to give a speech to delegates and meet the outgoing
bureau and the new bureau. The reason was probably because she was not
Cor Unum’s chosen candidate. It was an act of amazing rudeness.

The Cor Unum official almost had a punch-up with the incoming
treasurer, a young Croatian, and shook with rage when Knight was
brought by him to the front to meet the Holy Father, as was her right.
During her four years as secretary general, Knight was never once
invited to the Cor Unum office for talks. The official, Mgr Dal Toso,
rather than being sacked for such behaviour, was given promotion and
is now secretary to the dicastery.

What other consequences will this control have? My fear is that
supporters will abandon Caritas in reaction to what they see as a
heavy-handed Curia out of touch with people and certainly the poor.
That would jeopardise the work of Caritas in nearly every country in
the world – and deny many local Churches the resources to exercise
their social mission.

A second consequence could be that CI members will pay their fees but
work separ­ately during major disasters. All evaluations of disasters
point to a lack of coordination as being a major factor in why NGOs
did not do better for those affected. With the imposition of Cor Unum
controls, members will increasingly do their own thing instead of
having a coordinated response. This could also result in members
finding other, creative ways of collaboration outside of Rome to
achieve an effective response, a tragedy for communion within the
confederation.

National members report to their individual bishops’ conferences but
Cor Unum’s ­president, Cardinal Robert Sarah, writing in L’Osservatore
Romano recently, stated that, though they are autonomous under the
direction of the local ordinaries, this could inspire the bishops to
revise the statutes of their dio­cesan and national Caritas
organisations. Cor Unum forgets that, in most cases, there is a close
cooperation between national Caritas members and their bishops. Cor
Unum also overestimates its popularity among bishops close to Caritas.
With so much bureaucratic interference, Caritas will have difficulties
in exercising the humanitarian imperative of assisting the poor
quickly and efficiently, and with, as Pope Benedict writes in Deus
Caritas Est, “a heart which sees”.

With Cor Unum deciding salaries and contracts, and presumably
attempting to reduce salaries, which reflect the development market at
the international level, it will also be difficult to attract
professionals to work at the general secretariat. If Cor Unum follows
its own staff policy, lay people would most likely come from the new
movements such as Communion and Liberation, and it is doubtful if
anyone who was not a Catholic of a particular hue would be hired.
Members of the confederation could then withdraw funds, rendering the
general secretariat a lame duck and reducing the Church’s influence in
aid and development on the world stage.

The revised statutes and internal rules, while clarifying many issues,
ride roughshod over the democratic structure of CI. The new execu­tive
board had vacancies for four members. Four candidates (including one
bishop) from the membership put their names forward while three
bishops from outside were imposed by Cor Unum. That left only one
place for an elected representative, thus removing a fundamental
principle of democracy.

Pope Benedict XVI, in his address to the CI General Assembly in 2011,
rightly stressed that it differed from other social agencies in that
it was ecclesial. It shares in the mission of the Church and that has
consequences for the way it acts. That is why CI wraps its strategic
plan round Catholic Social Teaching principles and uses those
principles as indicators of good integral human development practice.
That is why it manifests a love of neighbour in its dealings with
people of all faiths. This led, for example, to a Muslim woman in Bam
after the 2004 earthquake in Iran asking for a Bible to see why the
Caritas people “treated us with such love and respect”. That is why
periodically Caritas looks at its Catholic identity but within the
particular ambit of its mission to serve the poor. As Professor Neil
Ormerod has written, “What is important for the life of the Church is
that through the full variety of structures and institutions which
emerge from its life all aspects of its identity and mission be
expressed, not that each individual structure reflects that totality.”
But Caritas does not have the ear of the Pope – Cor Unum does.

Largely, the straitjacket decrees are based on the false premise that
CI did not follow church teaching. When we negotiated a Memo of
Understanding with the joint United Nations Programme on HIV/Aids so
that members could have access to its expertise, we were careful to
send it for approval to the Secretariat of State. Archbishop, now
Cardinal, Tauran replied that it was a good example of the Church’s
social teaching in action. When we were part of the Sphere Project
with other NGOs to improve standards in humanitarian interventions, we
demanded a disclaimer from certain matters which conflicted with
church teaching, and that disclaimer, after much insistence, was
granted. This is surely the way to interact with the secular world
rather than stifle dialogue.

When Archbishop João Braz de Aviz took over as head of the office in
the Vatican overseeing religious orders, he said: “Only after we’ve
established a dialogue do we discuss issues and try to clear things up
if there is a problem. This seems much more fruitful than simply going
in with a prejudiced attitude.”

My greatest fear is that with too much bureaucratic control, we as a
Church will be betraying the very people we were set up to serve – the
poor.

http://www.thetablet.co.uk/article/162707

END
______________________
John Ashworth

Sudan, South Sudan Advisor

[email protected]

+254 725 926 297 (Kenya mobile)
+211 919 695 362 (South Sudan mobile)
+27 82 050 1235 (South Africa mobile)
+44 750 304 1790 (UK/international)
+88 216 4334 0735 (Thuraya satphone)

PO Box 52002 - 00200, Nairobi, Kenya

This is a personal e-mail address and the contents do not necessarily
reflect the views of any organisation

-- 
The content of this message does not necessarily reflect John Ashworth's views. 
Unless explicitly stated otherwise, John Ashworth is not the author of the 
content and the source is always cited.

You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"sudan-john-ashworth" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.co.za/group/sudan-john-ashworth

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/SouthSudanKob?hl=en.

Reply via email to