Press Releases
For Immediate Release
November 30, 2004
www.catholicsforchoice.org
www.condoms4life.org |
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Condoms4Life Issues Good Shepherd Awards
to Catholic Bishops from Four Countries on World AIDS Day
Catholics for a Free Choice applauds efforts of some bishops
who have made common sense steps to permit limited use of condoms
and chastises
as “lost sheep” those bishops who have impeded
prevention efforts.
WASHINGTON, DC—As the world marks the 17th World AIDS Day on
December 1, 2004, the Condoms4Life campaign, a project of Catholics
for a Free Choice, has issued Good Shepherd Awards to some Catholic
bishops for their positions on condom use to prevent the spread of
HIV/AIDS.
“In 2004, the Catholic church has been both a positive and negative
influence on stemming the pandemic and promoting a responsible policy
on HIV/AIDS prevention,” said Frances Kissling, president of
Catholics for a Free Choice, which initiated the Condoms4Life campaign. “Condoms4Life
issues these awards to encourage those bishops who demonstrate sanity,
compassion and justice when confronted with HIV/AIDS. While focusing
on progress within the church, we also want to call attention to those
bishops whose actions are harmful to those at risk of HIV and AIDS.”
Church authorities estimate that 26.7 percent of the centers dedicated
to treating HIV/AIDS in the world are Catholic-affiliated. This would
make the Catholic church the largest institution in the world providing
direct AIDS care. However, those who seek services from a Catholic
provider are unlikely to receive adequate information about condoms
or access to condoms as a means of preventing transmission of the disease.
Good Shepherds
This year, the Commission for Health of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference
of India (CBCI) receives the Condoms4Life Good Shepherd Award. In September,
the Catholic church in India began to construct its first policy on
HIV/AIDS prevention. While the institutional church has historically
been hostile to condom use and even spread misinformation to deter
people from using condoms, the bishops of India are developing a policy
to provide people with information about condoms.
According to James Veliath, coordinator of the CBCI program on HIV/AIDS
in the northern region, “The church will not be promoting or
propagating the use of condoms. We will, however, provide all information
about it. In case a couple wants to use it, we would suggest they speak
to their pastor and then take a decision based on what their conscience
says.”
Condoms4Life acknowledges the courage of the 11 bishops who participated
in the development of the HIV/AIDS Policy of the Catholic Church in
India.
However, India’s bishops are not alone in the move toward a sensible
position on condoms this year. In January, Cardinal Godfried
Danneels of Belgium articulated on Dutch public television a highly nuanced
position on AIDS prevention that accepts the church’s position
on abstinence but acknowledged that if sexual relations are going to
occur between people who are at risk, condoms should be used. “When
an HIV-positive person says to his partner, ‘I want to have sexual
relations,’ he must use a condom,” said the cardinal. “Morally,
it cannot be judged on the same level as when a condom is used to reduce
the number of births.”
Also in March, Bishop Kevin Dowling of Rustenburg, South Africa, continued
his leadership on this issue when he addressed an audience of 200 at
Boston College in Massachusetts. “Abstinence before marriage
and faithfulness to a single partner within a stable marriage – obviously,
those are key to good living [and] to avoid infection. However, the
church ministers in the real world… the church should give people
[all] the options, one of which is to use a condom, not as a contraceptive,
but to prevent transmission of a death-dealing virus,” he told
the crowd. Using the 1968 papal encyclical condemning artificial contraception
but supporting the use of oral contraceptives to control menstrual
bleeding, the bishop argued that condoms play a similar medical role
in stemming the spread of AIDS. The church prohibits the condom as
contraception, but when used to protect against AIDS, “it's not
being used as a contraceptive. The basic principle is there to be at
least discussed. People end up in relationships for a variety of reasons.
Their journey in life takes them to decisions about sexuality for many
reasons. I believe the church should be fundamentally experienced by
people as a revelation of the compassionate, nonjudging God that gives
people space to go through a range of experiences in the quest for
basic human dignity.”
In July, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor of Westminster, England,
publicly agreed with Cardinal Danneels in an interview with The Independent
of London. “While we can say that, objectively, the use of condoms
is wrong, there are places where it might be licit, or allowable, as
when there's a danger of intercourse leading to death. It would be
wrong to take a special case and make it a universal law.”
Finally, the Condoms4Life campaign applauds CAFOD (Catholic
Agency for Overseas Development) for continuing its work to provide a comprehensive
and compassionate prevention strategy through its services. According
to Ann Smith, the HIV corporate strategist at CAFOD, in a September
25 article for The Tablet, “CAFOD also believes in an ‘ABC’ approach,
but not in the simplistic terms in which it is often promoted. We see
ABC as belonging to one layer – risk reduction – of the
three needed for effective prevention…. The data is clear that
condoms, when used correctly and consistently, reduce but do not remove
the risk of HIV infection. This fact cannot be excluded from or misrepresented
in any information on risk reduction strategies, regardless of the
political or moral position of those promoting them.
Condom campaigns have been particularly effective with groups at the
highest risk – prostitutes, for example – who may have
few if any other realistic options for reducing this risk.” CAFOD
director Chris Bain confirmed the group’s policy, stating, “Our
stance has always been that the only solution is basically being faithful
and abstinent but you cannot lie to people if they are making their
own choices. They have to be given factual information. There is more
scientific evidence that condoms are an effective reduction of risk
but they do not eliminate it.”
Lost Sheep
Unfortunately, not all the bishops have demonstrated good judgment
this year. Over the last year, the Vatican has been promoting a new
paper from Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo,
president of the Pontifical Council on the Family. In “Family
Values versus Safe Sex,” the cardinal, most known for an appalling
misstatement about condoms’ ability to prevent the transmission
of the HIV on the BBC’s Panorama program “Sex and the
Holy City,” misrepresents scientific research to advance his
flawed and unjust view on the ethics of condom use. Cardinal Trujillo
has been a “lost sheep” in his promulgation of misleading
information that exacerbates the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Cardinal Trujillo is not alone. In February, the Croatian
Catholic bishops opposed a safe-sex program in the public school system because
of the inclusion of condoms as part of a broad prevention strategy.
Bishop Valter Zupan has drawn the ire of the medical community with
similar distortions of science, including claims that the HIV virus
passed through “pores” in condoms and that the use of condoms “increases
the risk of HIV infection.”
In June, Cardinal Emmanuel Wamala, the Archbishop of Kampala, supported
the choice of a Catholic Ugandan woman who chose to sleep unprotected
with her infected husband rather than using condoms. “If it is
wrong to use the condom, then she has made the right choice,” the
cardinal said on the June 27th edition of the BBC’s Panorama
program.
Finally, the Vatican itself has once again missed an opportunity to
revisit its ban on condoms, instead promoting abstinence as the only
option for prevention. In his written message for the XIII World Day
of the Sick to take place in Cameroon in February 2005, Pope John Paul
II states, “As regards the drama of AIDS, I have already had
occasion in other circumstances to emphasize that AIDS is also a ‘pathology
of the spirit.’ In order to fight AIDS in a responsible way,
its prevention should be increased through education in respect for
the sacred value of life and through formation in the correct practice
of sexuality.”
AWARDS
Good Shepherds will receive a small sculpture honoring their contributions
to HIV prevention efforts. For those whose actions have been harmful
to those at risk of HIV and AIDS, Condoms4Life will make a $500.00
contribution in the bishops’ names to an HIV/AIDS organization
in each of their countries that is working to provide those at risk
with comprehensive information about HIV/AIDS prevention.
Because of the damage done by the Vatican and Cardinal Trujillo, the
recipient of the Lost Sheep grant in their names will be the Frontiers
Prevention Program (FPP) of the International HIV/AIDS Alliance, which
seeks to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS in vulnerable countries. FPP
includes the promotion of condom use as part of a sensible and comprehensive
strategy to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS.
In Croatia, Condoms4Life is proud to provide a Lost Sheep grant in
the name of the Croatian bishops to MEMOAIDS, the program targeted
by the Croatian Conference of Catholic Bishops. MEMOAIDS is school-based
extracurricular peer education for high school students. MEMOAIDS teaches
the ABC model, and it involves condom demonstration and supports condom
use to prevent the transmission of the virus. MEMOAIDS was developed
by a team from the reproductive health department of a leading Croatian
children's hospital.
Condoms4Life will also present a Lost Sheep grant to an educational
program in Uganda that incorporates condoms into HIV/AIDS prevention
strategies. The grant will be made in the name of Kampala’s
Cardinal Wamala.
The Condoms4Life campaign is a worldwide public education effort to
raise public awareness about the devastating effect of the bishops’ ban
on condoms. Launched on World AIDS Day 2001, the first phase of the
campaign included billboards and ads in the US, Mexico, the Philippines,
South Africa, Kenya, Chile and Zimbabwe to change the Vatican’s
policy and challenge its aggressive lobbying against availability and
access to condoms in areas of the world most at risk. The ads are available
online at www.Condoms4Life.org. Condoms4Life has also developed Sex
in the HIV/AIDS Era: A Guide for Catholics to assist at-risk Catholics
who are struggling with questions around faith and conscience, sexuality
and the use of condoms for HIV/AIDS prevention (available at http://www.condoms4life.org/facts/index.htm).
Condoms4Life urges the Vatican to lift its ban on condoms
as a moral and humanitarian matter. By the end of 2003, there were
an estimated
37.8 million people worldwide living with HIV/AIDS, including the almost
5 million new people who acquired HIV. We ask bishops opposed to the
use of condoms to clarify that their objections to condoms as a means
of HIV/AIDS prevention are ecclesiastical, not scientific. Finally,
we call upon the bishops and clergy to repudiate the incorrect information
that has been circulated by officials of the Catholic church, and we
strongly encourage all to be scrupulously honest in describing the
effectiveness of condoms in the future.
###
The Condoms4Life campaign is a project of Catholics
for a Free Choice designed as a worldwide public education effort to
raise public awareness
about the devastating effect of the bishops’ ban on condoms.
Catholics for Free Choice (CFFC) shapes and advances sexual and reproductive
ethics that are based on justice, reflect a commitment to women’s
well being and respect and affirm the moral capacity of women and men
to make sound decisions about their lives. Through discourse, education
and advocacy, CFFC works in the US and internationally to infuse these
values into public policy, community life, feminist analysis and Catholic
social thinking and teaching.