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Pope Francis hopes to visit Spain to mark 500 years since Jesuit founder’s conversion

October 7, 2020 CNA Daily News 1

CNA Staff, Oct 7, 2020 / 10:30 am (CNA).- Pope Francis said he hoped to visit Spain to mark the 500th anniversary of the conversion of St. Ignatius of Loyola in an interview published Wednesday.

The pope told the Spanish edition of the monthly magazine Il Mio Papa that he hoped to travel to Manresa, in central Catalonia, where the founder of the Jesuit order arrived in 1522 seeking to pray and do penance.

“I believe that the conversion of St. Ignatius is also an encounter of the heart and can invite us to reflect on our personal conversion, to ask for the gift of conversion to love and serve more in the way of Jesus Christ,” said Francis, the first member of the Jesuits to be elected pope, in the interview released Oct. 7.

Ignatius’ military career came to an abrupt end in 1521 when a cannonball injured his right leg while he was defending the city of Pamplona. He experienced a spiritual awakening while recovering from surgery. When he could walk again, he decided to embark on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. 

He went to a Benedictine abbey in Montserrat, where he confessed his sins, exchanged his expensive clothes for sackcloth, and left his sword before an altar dedicated to the Virgin Mary. 

He then walked to Manresa, arriving on March 25, 1522, and settling in a natural cave where he would spend the next 11 months. It was there that he underwent the religious experiences that led him to write the Spiritual Exercises, the foundation of Ignatian spirituality.

In 2022, Manresa will be the focus of events marking the 500th anniversary of this turning point in the life of Ignatius, who went on to complete his pilgrimage to Jerusalem and then founded the Society of Jesus in 1534. 

In July, Jesuit superior general Fr. Arturo Sosa announced that 2021-2022 would be designated an Ignatian Year. The year will begin on May 20, 2021, the 500th anniversary of the wounding of St. Ignatius during the Battle of Pamplona, and end on July 31, 2022, the Jesuit founder’s feast day.

The pandemic has forced Pope Francis to cancel his plans for international travel in 2020. His last foreign visit was to Thailand and Japan in November 2019. Last Sunday he made his first official trip outside Rome since the COVID-19 outbreak in Italy, signing his new encyclical, “Fratelli tutti,” in Assisi.

The Vatican has given no indication of when the pope will make his next journey outside Italy. If he visits Manresa, it would be his first trip to Spain — where 60% of the 47 million population consider themselves Catholic — since his election in 2013.

In his interview with Il Mio Papa, a publication founded in Italy in 2014, Pope Francis also reflected on the world after the coronavirus pandemic, migration, and service of the poor. 

He revealed what was going through his mind when he gave an extraordinary Urbi et Orbi blessing March 27 at the height of the pandemic in Italy. The 83-year-old said that at first he was afraid of slipping on the rain-slicked steps outside St. Peter’s Basilica.

“My heart was with all the people of God who were suffering, with a humanity that had to endure this pandemic and, on the other hand, which had the courage to strive forward,” he said, according to a translation of the Spanish interview by Vatican News.

“I climbed the stairs praying. I prayed the entire time, and I went away praying. That’s how I lived that March 27.”

The pope admitted that he had struggled with his general audiences during lockdown because they took place without members of the public present.

He said: “It was like talking to ghosts. I made up for many of these physical absences with telephone calls and letters. That helped me to take the pulse of how families and communities were living this.”


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Amnesty International’s expanded abortion advocacy gets human rights wrong, critic says

October 7, 2020 CNA Daily News 2

Denver Newsroom, Oct 7, 2020 / 03:39 am (CNA).- An international law expert has criticized Amnesty International’s new support for abortion access through all nine months of pregnancy and its claim that human rights protections “start at birth.”

“Amnesty’s announcement is reflective of a self-referential echo chamber made up by abortion groups and elements of the international system,” Elyssa Koren, director of United Nations advocacy at ADF International, told CNA Oct. 5. “They think that by consistently asserting that abortion is a ‘human right,’ they can make it so.”

On Sept. 28, Amnesty International released an update to its abortion policy, calling for “universal access to safe abortion, as early as possible and as late as necessary.” It said that “anyone who can become pregnant has the right to an abortion” and called for the full decriminalization of abortion.

The updated policy characterized pregnancy and abortion decisions as directly impacting “the full spectrum of human rights.” An accompanying FAQ opposed laws requiring either spousal or parental consent for abortion.

The group said its updated policy “confirms that human rights protections start at birth, in line with international law.”

Rajat Khosla, senior director of research and advocacy at Amnesty International, said Sept. 28 the update was developed “in consultation with human rights experts, medical providers and the Amnesty movement, and informed by years of research and engagement with women and girls whose lives have been shattered by restrictive laws.”

Koren at ADF International, however, criticized claims of a pro-abortion global consensus.

“When Amnesty refers to growing voices in the international realm to support its claim, it must be acknowledged that these voices are operating illegitimately in the first place,” she told CNA. “They stem from various bureaucratic functions within the UN system that have been co-opted by abortion activists. Their decrees are not reflective of the will of the community of member states—the majority of which are not in support of the UN’s aggressive abortion agenda.”

She also criticized Amnesty’s view that rights begin at birth.

“The right to life that all persons possess applies from the moment when life starts, which science confirms is at conception,” Koren said. “International law supports this reality. This is evidenced in historical protections for pregnant women facing penalty of death.”

Koren cited the preamble of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, ratified by over 190 countries, which affirms that children need “special safeguards and care, including appropriate legal protection, before as well as after birth.”

“Given that Amnesty has no power to re-craft international law or the laws of science, their announcement that human rights ‘start at birth’ creates no change in the human rights tradition,” Koren said. “That said, it does contribute to the existing body of dangerous misinterpretations that seek to re-imagine the international order.”

Khosla at Amnesty International said full decriminalization of abortion is “essential to protect human rights and prevent further deaths and injuries due to unsafe abortions.”

“Abortion is not an isolated issue. Denying people the right to make decisions about their own bodies perpetuates gender and economic inequality, and entrenches stigma and discrimination,” he said, adding, “We will continue to demand that governments respect reproductive autonomy, and campaign for safe abortion access for anyone who seeks it, without discrimination, coercion or stigma.”

While Khosla said about 47,000 women die each year as a result of seeking “unsafe” abortions, Koren said better data is needed to evaluate the causes of maternal mortality.

“Much of the existing data ignores the fact that even ‘safe,’ meaning legal, abortions cause deaths—of course, all babies die, but women do as well,” she said. “Abortion is never safe, particularly in the developing world. One of the primary reasons is lack of access to blood if a woman hemorrhages.”

“More accurate numbers, often obscured by the many overlapping challenges women face, would surely show the catastrophic impact of abortions as a whole, both legal and illegal, on women’s lives and well-being,” she said.

“Every life lost is a tragic failure of the international system to guarantee the most fundamental of our human rights,” Koren continued. “No woman should ever have to turn to abortion…The legalization of abortion is not the answer to the problem of ‘unsafe abortion’ as it has in fact been shown to increase maternal mortality.”

Koren said women’s needs would be better met by improving access to food, water, housing, education, decent work, and freedom from violence.

“UN member states pledged to reduce recourse to abortion at the 1995 International Conference on Population and Development, a commitment which holds to this day. The emphasis should remain on this,” she said.

For Koren, Amnesty’s pro-abortion stand is self-defeating.

“Amnesty’s abortion agenda has significantly undermined its authentic human rights credentials,” she said. “While there always will be divergences in the international community, the human rights situation is so dire in so many places around the world that what is needed is a shared re-commitment to the basics of human rights.”

“As its agenda grows increasingly aggressive, it is sure to alienate governments that would otherwise want to work with the international community to better their international human rights trajectory. Most insidiously, Amnesty’s efforts not only de-legitimize its own work, but that of the international human rights project as a whole,” Koren told CNA.

Amnesty International claims 7 million members worldwide. In 2018 it received about $352 million in 2018 donations, mostly from individuals.

Amnesty International’s embrace of pro-abortion advocacy, which it announced in 2007, marked a major shift for the organization.

In 2016, documents reportedly hacked from George Soros’ Open Society Foundations appeared to show that it would fund Amnesty International’s Ireland affiliate to change the Republic of Ireland’s pro-life constitutional protections for the rights of the unborn child. The foundations’ strategy document indicated it saw Ireland as a model to change pro-life laws in other strongly Catholic countries.

Irish authorities initially ruled that the Amnesty affiliate needed to return some $160,000 to the Soros foundations because it violated Irish law barring foreign donations to third party groups seeking to influence the outcome of a electoral referendum campaign. However, Amnesty International denied the funds were used for its successful campaign to repeal the pro-life amendment, and the ruling against Amnesty Ireland was overturned in court in 2018.

 


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