Archbishop Gallagher: Pandemic solutions require science, humanism alliance
By Vatican News staff writer
Opening his speech at the Colloquium on Science Diplomacy on Monday, Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, the Holy See's Secretary for Relations with States, thanked the Lincean Academy in Rome for organizing the invitation.
Speaking on the theme âFraternity, integral ecology and Covid-19: The contribution of diplomacy and scienceâ, Archbishop Gallagher spoke of the âtestâ that Covid-19 has been to the whole of humanity.
Describing it as an âepochal crisisâ, the coronavirus, he said, has âexposed the radical vulnerability of everyone and everythingâ, raising numerous doubts and concerns and causing our securities to âcollapseâ. Suddenly, he said, âwe find ourselves weak and full of fearâ.
Era full of contradictions
âWe live in an era full of contradictionsâ continued Archbishop Gallagher. âIf, on the one hand, we are witnessing unprecedented progress in various scientific fields, on the other hand, the world is facing multiple humanitarian crises in different areas of the planet, each of which are strongly interrelated.â
He then went on to mention four crises that the coronavirus has brought to life. The first was the âhealth crisisâ and the repercussions that it will have on all aspects of life: âeconomy, politics, nutrition and access to food.â
A food crisis, he continued, âis already underway.â Archbishop Gallagher explained that the pandemic will âfurther exacerbateâ this crisis by compromising âproduction, distribution and access to foodâ both in the long and short terms â âespecially for the most vulnerableâ. The spectrum of famine, he continued, is âcrossing our world once more.â
This final point, he continued, recalls us back to the environmental crisis. âClimate change represents a multitude of threats, with the potential to push part of the worldâs population into extreme poverty in the coming years, nullifying the significant progress made in terms of development and that was achieved with great difficulty.â
Continuing, Archbishop Gallagher noted that âto all of this is added the economic and social crisis.â
The pandemic continues to have significant economic repercussions with substantial effects on the labor market. It revealed and amplified many of the vulnerabilities and injustices that were already present.
âThe devastating consequences of inequality can no longer be ignored. For millions of workers, no income means no food, no security and no future. The poor, especially those working in the informal sectors, were the first to see their means of survival disappear,â he said.
âThe health crisis, food crisis, environmental crisis and socio-economic crisis are all highly interrelated transversal crises, so much so that we can speak of a single and complex socio-health-environmental crisis.â
The possibility of starting over
Archbishop Gallagher noted that âthe Covid-19 pandemic can, in fact, represent a real moment of conversion and give rise to the possibility of starting over, a second chance."
This requires a clear vision of what kind of society and economy we want to build, said Archbishop Gallagher. This clear vision cannot fail to call for a careful evaluation and re-proposal of the concept of security. This, however, he continued, does not mean spending money to arm nations, as âweapons and armies will not guarantee greater security.â
âThe international community is called upon to adopt forward-looking strategies to promote the goal of peace and stability and avoid shortsighted approaches to national and international security problems.â
Everything is connected
Making reference to ĐÓMAP”Œșœ Francisâ Encyclical, Laudato Si', in which the Holy Father describes everything as being related and connected, Archbishop Gallagher said, âStrategies for a solution demand an integrated approach to combating poverty, restoring dignity to the excluded, and at the same time protecting nature.â
Education, continued Archbishop Gallagher, is essential in order to âadopt an integral point of view that favours an intimate knowledge of nature and its processesâ. He discussed the importance of âspaces for education and formation.â
âThe transforming power of education in integral ecology requires the patience to generate long-term processes, aimed at shaping genuinely sustainable policies and economies which promote quality of life, in favor of all peoples and the planet, especially the disadvantaged and those in situations of greater risk,â he said.
The Covid-19 pandemic has revealed problems that already existed for years and that can no longer be avoided. âThe world was relentlessly moving towards an economy that, thanks to technological progress, sought to reduce âhuman costsâ; there were those who would have had us believe that freedom of the market was sufficient to keep everything secure."
Contribution of diplomacy and science
Archbishop Gallagher continued explaining that âa new alliance between science and humanism is indispensable.â
He said the two must be integrated and not separated, and should not be opposed to one another. The health and the economic and social development of our community depend on them. Concerning the latter, we need âthe development of a global community of fraternity based on the practice of social friendship on the part of peoples and nations calls for a better kind of politics, one truly at the service of the common good. Sadly, politics today often takes forms that hinder progress towards a different world,â he said.
Archbishop Gallagher went on to note that "often, in our technologically advanced world, there is the temptation to seek solutions to problems through science and technology alone."
"An approach disconnected from the human person cannot reach a solid, just and human solution. It risks being partial, relative and ideological. In recent years, technological development has made it possible to achieve incredible progress for our societies, however it has also led to the belief that technology itself can predict all human activity using only data and algorithms. Instead, in order to face the consequences of the pandemic, I would argue that we must engage in innovative scientific and institutional models based on the sharing of knowledge and cooperation between different disciplines."
âLife is bigger than scienceâ, he added.
Archbishop Gallagher concluded by quoting ĐÓMAP”Œșœ Francis: âWe never emerge from a crisis just as we were. We come out either better or worse. This is why, at this critical juncture, it is our duty to rethink the future of our common home and our common project. A complex task lies before us, one that requires a frank and coherent dialogue aimed at strengthening multilateralism and cooperation between states. The present crisis has further demonstrated the limits of our self-sufficiency as well as our common vulnerability. It has forced us to think clearly about how we want to emerge from this: either better or worse. The pandemic has shown us that we cannot live without one another, or worse still, pitted against one another. The United Nations was established to bring nations together, to be a bridge between peoples. Let us make good use of this institution in order to transform the challenge that lies before us into an opportunity to build together, once more, the future we all desireâ.
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