World Day of Social Justice:
Why are
we here if not to serve humanity?
On World Day of Social Justice, the
CIDSE Secretary General reminds us that every decision we take and every new
policy that is implemented have an impact on the lives and livelihoods of
others, and that the crises we face today are interconnected.
-By Francesca Merlo
Social Justice means equality and
dignity for all. It means a system is put in place not only to protect but to
aid choices people make, as well as to create an environment that keeps them
safe and helps them flourish.
World Day of Social Justice is
celebrated annually on 20 February and its observance aims to do just that: to
remind us, each year, of the need to build fairer, more equitable societies.
A multiple crisis
Today, the main challenge we are
facing within this realm, according to Josianne Gauthier, Secretary General of
CIDSE, is that “we are speaking of a pluri-crisis”.
On the frontline in the battle for
social justice, CIDSE is an international family of Catholic social justice
organisations working together for social justice, and Ms Gauthier explains
that “we've gone from seeing that multiple crises we dealt with in the past are
deeply interconnected.
"Whether it's climate
disruption, extreme poverty, violence, war and conflict over resources, gender,
social and racial inequality," she says, adding they are all triggered by
"power imbalances and a culture of waste, we're now recognizing that they
are just one interconnected crisis of relationships between humans and between
humans and the rest of creation”.
Pope Francis' appeals
“Culture of waste” as Ms Gauthier
notes, is a concept used often by Pope Francis, who has dedicated much of his
pontificate to fighting the global indifference that causes injustices. In
particular, Pope Francis continuously appeals for the protection of our common
home that is threatened by climate change, for the protection and welcome of
migrants and refugees, and he warns against what he describes as “the
globalization of indifference” calling on richer countries to take concrete
action to help the poor.
Speaking of migration Ms Gauthier
notes that when people are forced to leave their home country, because it’s
uninhabitable and offers them no future, “we're facing a crisis of our own
morality”.
“How can we allow for other human
beings to flee their homes due to our own political and economic choices that
are impacting them and then turn them away when they cross the border and are
in need of our solidarity?” she asks.
"It's only a matter of
justice!"
An "opportunity"
Ms Gauthier invites everyone to see
World Day of Social Justice as a unique opportunity to “take a pause and
reflect on how we treat each other, how we can build more just relationships
with each other and with life on this planet, which is our common home”.
Pope Francis' call for social justice
and human rights, according to Ms Gauthier, is “extremely relevant”, and it
“should be the most important and resounding message for policymakers right
now”. She says she believes that
policies must always be linked and rooted in how they affect people's lives,
all of our lives, on a daily basis, because, she adds, “what else are we here
for if it's not to serve humanity and make it a welcoming and just home for
all?”
Finally, Ms Gauthier reminds us that
“it is not a game” and that working together, thinking of everyone, is a common
and collective responsibility, which “Pope Francis does not tire of reminding
us of”.
Vatican News
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