The Record Newspaper 06 July 1995

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What's inside . . .

Archbishop Hickey's reflection on capital punishment and the arguments against its use - Page 2 Anglican Archbishop Peter Carnley writes on the United Nations International Year of Tolerance and the need to expose and fight the intolerable - Pages 8-9 PERTH, WA: July 6, 1995

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Social justice commission seeks to increase ts membership - Page 3 More Letters to the Editor - Page 7 Renowed novelist Leon Uris recollects the harrowing events of World War II - Page 11

Religion can help women: Vatican, Muslims VATICAN CITY (CNS) - Vatican and said. "They expressed their apprehension Muslim leaders have said the draft docu- regarding the draft document for Beijing ment of the upcoming Fourth World Con- which ignores the positive role of religion ference on Women in Beijing overlooks in this process," he said. the positive contributions that religions The Vatican-Muslim talks brought can make to women's rights. together representatives of the Pontifical In a brief statement issued after a one- Council for Interreligious Dialogue and of day discussion late last month, Vatican three major Islamic organisations: the spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls said the Muslim World League, the World Muslim Vatican and Islamic organisations had Congress and the International Islamic agreed to keep collaborating on the issues Council for Da'wa and Relief. Representatives from the Egyptian Alraised by the document. The United Nations-sponsored conference will take Azhar University also participated in the place in the Chinese capital, Beijing, in meeting. Dr Navarro-Valls, in an earlier briefing September. on the draft UN document, mixed praise The Vatican spokesman said the talks had focused on the place of women in with criticism. The criticism focused society according to Christian and Muslim largely on what the Vatican spokesman religious traditions, including "points of termed "ideological pressure" aimed at imposing a narrow feminist agenda on the convergence and points of divergence." women of the world. Participants "affirmed the necessity to Meanwhile, other voices on the Beijing recognise the dignity, role and rights of conference were being heard in Rome and women in society and to take adequate at the Vatican. measures toward their realisation," he United States Ambassador to the Vati-

'Barbaric' death penalty Archbishop Barry Hickey has issued a tionally accepted the power of the State to strong statement arguing that the circum- impose the death penalty in very excepstances justifying the use of the death tional circumstances, many question penalty are so rare that its imposition is whether it should ever be used," he said. hardly ever justified. Archbishop Hickey also cited Pope John While Archbishop Hickey says his view Paul Il's recent encyclical letter, Evanon the matter is purely personal, he has gelium Vitae, which said that execution of urged in a reflection on the death penalty offenders should not occur except in cases issued today (full text Page 2) that all of absolute necessity, where it would not Catholics seriously consider its founda- be otherwise possible to defend society. tion. The encyclical said that "as a result of Not only is the death penalty a "frighten- steady improvements in the organisation ing contradiction" in a society which conof the penal system, such cases are very demns the taking of human life, but it is also in opposition to the spirit of the rare, if not practically non-existent." Archbishop Hickey's conclusion is that Gospel, he said there is no place for the death penalty in Commenting on his statement in his Archbishop's Perspective column, he says Australian society and that the answer to that the overall context in which he views serious crime lies in addressing its causes the issue is the Church's defence of the rather than taking the life of offenders. "In Australia, we have done without the sacredness of human life. Catholics should be consistent in their death penalty for ten years," he said. "It remains our responsibility to see that application of this principle to all issues involving the taking of human life, includ- the perpetrators of serious crime are ing opposing war, torture, poverty and brought to justice swiftly and that their unjust treatment of refugees, Archbishop imprisonment offers meaningful opportunities for rehabilitation - always rememHickey says. Speaking in his accompanying reflec- bering that the denial of liberty (imprisontion, he says the death penalty should not ment) is the main punishment." His statement comes at a time when be imposed for a number of reasons: it contributes to the culture of death; it some have called for a re-introduction of causes additional cruel punishment the penalty. through appeals and stays of execution; States such as Western Australia have there is no proof that it leads to a reduc- experienced rising crime rates in recent tion in murder: and that it is most often years and a number of people have been used against the powerless. killed as a result of criminal actions such "While the Catholic Church has tradi- as car theft and joy riding.

can, Raymond Flynn, in remarks last Saturday to a group of students in Rome, defended the Beijing draft document, in remarks that appeared to respond to those of the Vatican spokesman. "We do not share the opinion that the draft platform for action reflects solely the views of Western countries or that it responds to any particular ideology," he said. He said developing countries as well as the Vatican itself had been important voices in the shaping of the draft document. For example, he said, an entire section devoted to issues of young women and girls was the product of African states. "The United States seeks to work cooperatively with all participants, including the Holy See, to ensure that the final document reflects a mainstream global consensus that will stand the test of time," he said. "I think all of us share a high sense of respect for Pope John Paul ll's recent condemnation of 'every kind of injustice that oppresses the condition of women' in the

world today," Mr Flynn added. Italian professor Maria Rita Saulle, who helped chair a Vatican-sponsored consultation on the draft docuthent in early June, said it was an "unfortunate" possibility that the conference would try to erode the principle of the right to life, as articulated In previous UN statements. In an interview with Vatican Radio, she also criticised what she said was an unofficial movement in UN circles to introduce deliberately ambiguous terms regarding sexual gender. She said that in addition to male and female, the term "neutral" was being promoted by some as a category of sexual identity for homosexuals and transsexuals A Vatican source said there had been telephone consultation between US and Vatican officials in recent weeks to head off possible conflicts in Beijing. The Vatican still has serious misgivings about the draft document, however, the source said.

Kissing Frogs brings fame to Clare

Clare McNeill of Year 7 at Loreto Primary School in Nedlands brought great credit to herself, her family and her school last month when she won the state final of the Speak Up public speaking competition. Competing with Year 6 and Year 7 children, she took the topic Kissing Frogs - Lately. Here Michelle Stanley of Post Newspapers captures Clare with Kermit the Frog. Picture: Brian Coyne of the Catholic Education Office.

Historic shared sermon together on the altar for the entire first part of the Mass. The Patriarch's departure from the altar VATICAN CITY (CNS) - Pope John Paul at the start of the Liturgy of the Eucharist II and Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch pointedly illustrated that divisions remain. Bartholomew I celebrated a historic In the words of the Patriarch, "We are not liturgy in St Peter's Basilica last week, pro- yet worthy of the grace of the common fessing the faith together and describing Communion cup." the role of the papacy as one of service, Both leaders focused in part on one of not power. the more sensitive ecumenical issues that In a "shared sermon" during the Mass remains to be resolved: the role of the on June 29, both leaders looked ahead Pope and his primacy among bishops. with optimism to the prospect of full unity. The Pope noted that Christ's mandate Later, the Pope invited the Patriarch to join regarding Church leadership was given to him in blessing a crowd from the central St Peter and represented an "unfathbalcony of the church. omable mystery." But the "true meaning of The liturgy reflected the progress in that authority is service," he added. Catholic-Orthodox relations over the past Patriarch Bartholomew developed a 30 years. After walking down the length of similar point in his sermon. the church side by side in an entrance procession, the Pope and Patriarch were Continued on Page 2 By John Thavis


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