Message of the Holy Father Francis for the
launch of the “UN Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration”, 04.06.2021
The following is the message sent by the Holy
Father Francis for the launch of the “UN Decade
on Ecosystem Restoration”, to prevent, stop and
reverse damage to ecosystems at a global level:
Message of the Holy Father
To Her Excellency Mrs. Inger Andersen, UNEP
Executive Director
and to His Excellency Mr. Qu Dongyu, FAO
Director-General
Your Excellencies,
Tomorrow we will celebrate World Environment
Day. This annual commemoration encourages us to
remember that everything is interconnected. A
true «concern for the environment […] needs to
be joined to a sincere love for our fellow human
beings and an unwavering commitment to resolving
the problems of society».[1]
Tomorrow’s celebration, however, will have a
special significance, as it will take place in
the year in which the United Nations Decade on
Ecosystem Restoration begins. This decade
invites us to make ten-year commitments aimed at
caring for our common home by «supporting and
scaling up efforts to prevent, halt and reverse
the degradation of ecosystems worldwide and
raise awareness of the importance of successful
ecosystem restoration».[2]
In the Bible we read that: «The heavens declare
the glory of God; / the skies proclaim the work
of his hands. / Day after day they pour forth
speech; / night after night they reveal
knowledge. / They have no speech, they use no
words; / no sound is heard from them».[3]
We are all part of this gift of creation. We are
a part of nature, not separated from it. This is
what the Bible tells us.
The current environmental situation calls us to
act now with urgency to become ever more
responsible stewards of creation and to restore
the nature that we have been damaging and
exploiting for too long. Otherwise, we risk
destroying the very basis on which we depend. We
risk floods, and hunger and severe consequences
for ourselves and for future generations. This
is what many scientists tell us.
We need to take care of each other, and of the
weakest among us. Continuing down this path of
exploitation and destruction – of humans, and of
nature – is unjust and unwise. This is what a
responsible conscience would tell us.
We have a responsibility to leave a habitable
common home for our children and for future
generations.
However, when we look around ourselves, what do
we see? We see crisis leading to crisis. We see
the destruction of nature, as well as a global
pandemic leading to the death of millions of
people. We see the unjust consequences of some
aspects of our current economic systems and
numerous catastrophic climate crises that
produce grave effects on human societies and
even mass extinction of species.
And yet there is hope. «We have the freedom
needed to limit and direct technology; we can
put it at the service of another type of
progress, one which is healthier, more human,
more social, more integral».[4]
We are witnessing new engagement and commitment
by several States and non-Governmental actors:
local authorities, the private sector, civil
society, youth … efforts aimed at promoting what
we can call “integral ecology”, which is a
complex and multidimensional concept: it calls
for long-term vision; it highlights the
inseparability of «concern for nature, justice
for the poor, commitment to society and interior
peace»;[5] it is aimed at restoring «the various
levels of ecological equilibrium, establishing
harmony within ourselves, with others, with
nature and other living creatures, and with
God».[6] It makes each of us aware of our
responsibility as human beings, towards
ourselves, towards our neighbour, towards
creation and towards the Creator.
However, we are warned that we have little time
left – scientists say the next ten years, the
span of this UN Decade – to restore the
ecosystem, which will mean the integral
restoration of our relation with nature.
The many “warnings” we are experiencing, among
which we can see Covid-19 and global warming,
are pushing us to take urgent action. I hope
that the COP26 on climate change, to be held in
Glasgow next November, will help to give us the
right answers to restore ecosystems both through
a strengthened climate action and a spread of
awareness and consciousness.
We are also impelled to rethink our economies.
We require a «further and deeper reflection on
the meaning of the economy and its goals, as
well as a profound and far-sighted revision of
the current model of development, so as to
correct its dysfunctions and deviations».[7]
Ecosystem degradation is a clear outcome of
economic dysfunction.
Restoring the nature we have damaged means, in
the first place, restoring ourselves. As we
welcome this United Nations Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration, let us be compassionate, creative
and courageous. May we take our proper place as
a “Restoration Generation”.
From the Vatican, 27 May 2021
FRANCIS
___________________________________________________
[1] Encyclical Letter Laudato si’ (24 May 2015),
91.
[2] UNGA Resolution 73/284 adopted on 1 March
2019: “United Nations Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration (2021-2030), op. 1.
[3] Psalm 19: 1-3.
[4] Encyclical Letter Laudato si’ (24 May 2015),
112.
[5] Ibid., 10.
[6] Ibid., 210.
[7] Benedict XVI, Encyclical Letter. Caritas in
veritate (29 June 2009), 32.
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