The Holy Father Francis opens the General States
of Birth, an online initiative promoted by the
Forum of Family Associations, 14.05.2021
This morning, the Holy Father Francis left Santa
Marta and transferred by car to the Auditorium
della Conciliazione in Rome to participate in
the opening of the first edition of the Stati
Generali della Natalità, the General States of
Birth, an online initiative promoted by the
Forum of Family Associations.
Upon his arrival, Pope Francis was welcomed by
the president of the Auditorium, Dr. Francesco
Carducci, the Prime Minister of the Italian
Republic, Mario Draghi, and the national
president of the Forum of Family Associations,
Gigi De Palo. The Holy Father then greeted the
authorities present and the participants at the
meeting.
After the introductory greeting by President De
Palo and the speech by the Prime Minister, the
Pope delivered his address in the foyer of the
Auditorium.
At the end, after greeting some families with
children, the Holy Father left the Auditorium
and returned to the Vatican.
The following is the Pope’s address at the
opening of the General States of Birth:
Address of the Holy Father
Dear brothers and sisters
I cordially greet you and I am grateful to the
President of the Forum of Family Associations,
Gianluigi De Palo, for the invitation and for
his words of introduction. I thank Dr Mario
Draghi, President of the Government, for his
clear and hopeful words. I would like to thank
all of you who are reflecting today on the
urgent issue of the birth rate, which is
fundamental to reverse the current trend and get
Italy moving again, starting with life, starting
with the human being. And it is good that you
are doing this together, involving businesses,
banks, culture, the media, sport and
entertainment. In reality, there are many other
people here with you: above all, there are the
young people who dream. The data say that most
young people want to have children. But their
dreams of life, buds of rebirth for the country,
clash with a demographic winter that is still
cold and dark: only half of young people believe
they will be able to have two children in their
lifetime.
For years Italy has thus had the lowest number
of births in Europe, in what is becoming the old
continent no longer because of its glorious
history, but because of its advanced age. This
country of ours, where every year it is as if a
city of over two hundred thousand inhabitants
were disappearing, in 2020 reached the lowest
number of births since national unity: not only
because of Covid, but because of a continuous,
progressive downward trend, an increasingly
harsh winter.
Yet all this does not yet seem to have attracted
general attention, which is focused on the
present and the immediate. The President of the
Republic reiterated the importance of the birth
rate, which he defined as 'the most critical
reference point of this season', saying that
'families are not the connective tissue of
Italy, families are Italy' (Audience with the
Forum of Family Associations, 11 February 2020).
How many families in recent months have had to
work overtime, dividing their homes between work
and school, with parents acting as teachers,
computer technicians, workers, psychologists!
And how many sacrifices are required of
grandparents, the true lifelines of families!
But not only that: they are the memory that
opens us up to the future.
For the future to be good, we must therefore
take care of families, especially young
families, who are beset by worries that risk
paralysing their life plans. I am thinking of
the uncertainty of work, of the fears caused by
the increasingly unaffordable costs of raising
children: these are fears that can swallow up
the future, quicksand that can sink a society. I
also think, with sadness, of women at work who
are discouraged from having children or have to
hide their pregnancies. How is it possible that
a woman should feel ashamed of the most
beautiful gift that life can offer? Not the
woman, but society should be ashamed, because a
society that does not welcome life stops living.
Children are the hope that gives birth to a
people! Finally, in Italy, a decision has been
taken to turn into law an allowance, defined as
unique and universal, for every child that is
born. I express my appreciation to the
authorities and hope that this allowance will
meet the concrete needs of families, who have
made and are making so many sacrifices, and will
mark the start of social reforms that put
children and families at the centre. If families
are not at the centre of the present, there will
be no future; but if families start again,
everything will start again.
I would now like to look at this new start and
offer you three thoughts that I hope will be
useful in view of a hoped-for spring, which will
lift us out of the demographic winter. The first
thought revolves around the word gift. Every
gift is received, and life is the first gift
that each one of us received. No one can give it
to himself. First of all there was a gift. It is
a “before” that we forget in the course of our
lives, always intent on looking towards the
“after”, to what we can do and have. But first
of all we have received a gift and we are called
to pass it on. And a child is the greatest gift
for everyone and comes first. To a child, to
every child, is attached this word: first. Just
as a child is awaited and loved before he or she
is born, so we must put children first if we are
to see the light again after the long winter.
Instead, “a decline in the birthrate, which
leads to an ageing of the population, together
with the relegation of the elderly to a sad and
lonely existence, is a subtle way of stating
that it is all about us, that our individual
concerns are the only thing that matters”
(Encyclical Letter Fratelli tutti, 19). We have
forgotten the primacy of gift - the primacy of
gift! -, the source code of common living. This
has happened above all in the more affluent,
more consumerist societies. Indeed, we see that
where there are more things, there is often more
indifference and less solidarity, more closure
and less generosity. Let us help each other not
to lose ourselves in the things of life, to
rediscover life as the meaning of all things.
Let us help each other, dear friends, to
rediscover the courage to give, the courage to
choose life. There is a phrase from the Gospel
that can help anyone, even those who do not
believe, to direct their choices. Jesus says:
"Where your treasure is, there will your heart
be also" (Mt 6: 21). Where is our treasure, the
treasure of our society? In the children or in
finances? What attracts us, family or income?
There must be the courage to choose what comes
first, because that is where the heart is bound.
The courage to choose life is creative, because
it does not accumulate or multiply what already
exists, but opens up to novelty, to surprises:
every human life is a true novelty, which knows
no before and after in history. We have all
received this unrepeatable gift and the talents
we have serve to pass on, from generation to
generation, the first gift of God, the gift of
life.
This “handing down” links to the second thought
I would like to offer you. It revolves around
the word sustainability, a key word for building
a better world. We often talk about economic,
technological and environmental sustainability
and so on. But we also need to talk about
generational sustainability. We will not be able
to nurture production and preserve the
environment if we do not pay attention to
families and children. Sustainable growth comes
from here. History teaches us this. During the
phases of reconstruction following the wars that
devastated Europe and the world over the past
centuries, there was no restart without an
explosion of births, without the ability to
instil confidence and hope in the younger
generations. We cannot follow short-sighted
models of growth, as if a few hasty adjustments
were the only thing needed to prepare for
tomorrow. No, the dramatic birth rate and the
frightening figures linked to the pandemic
demand change and responsibility.
Sustainability rhymes with responsibility: it is
the time for responsibility to make society
flourish. Here, in addition to the primary role
of the family, the school is fundamental. It
cannot be a factory of notions to be poured over
individuals; it must be the privileged time for
encounter and human growth. At school one does
not mature only through grades, but through the
faces one encounters. And for young people it is
essential to come into contact with lofty models
that shape hearts as well as minds. In
education, example is very important, and here I
think also of the worlds of entertainment and
sport. It is sad to see role models who only
care about looking good, about being young and
fit. Young people do not grow up thanks to the
fireworks of appearance, they mature if
attracted by those who have the courage to
pursue big dreams, to sacrifice themselves for
others, to do good to the world in which we
live. And staying young does not come from
taking selfies and retouching them, but from
being able to look into the eyes of your
children one day. Sometimes, however, the
message goes out that fulfilment means making
money and success, while children seem almost
like a distraction, that should not hinder one's
personal aspirations. This mentality is a
gangrene in society and makes the future
unsustainable.
Sustainability needs a soul, and this soul - the
third word I propose - is solidarity. Just as we
need generational sustainability, we need
structural solidarity. The spontaneous and
generous solidarity of many has enabled a lot of
families to get by in these difficult times and
to cope with growing poverty. However, we cannot
remain in the realm of the emergency and the
temporary, we need to give stability to family
support structures and to encourage birth. We
need a policy, an economy, information and
culture that courageously promote birth.
First and foremost, there is a need for
wide-ranging, far-sighted family policies: not
based on the search for immediate consensus, but
on the growth of the common good in the long
term. This is the difference between running
public affairs and being a good politician.
There is an urgent need to offer young people
guarantees of sufficiently stable employment,
security for their homes, and incentives not to
leave the country. It is a task that also
closely concerns the world of economics: how
wonderful it would be to see an increase in the
number of businesses and companies that, in
addition to producing profits, promote lives,
that are careful never to exploit people with
unsustainable conditions and hours, that are
able to distribute part of the profits to
workers, with a view to contributing to an
invaluable development, that of families! This
is a challenge not only for Italy, but for many
countries, often rich in resources, but poor in
hope.
Solidarity must also be expressed in the
precious service of information, which has such
an impact on life and on how it is told. It is
in vogue to provide information, but the
criterion for training and informing is not the
audience, not controversy, but human growth.
What is needed is 'family-format information',
where people talk about others with respect and
delicacy, as if they were their own relatives.
At the same time, it must bring to light the
interests and plots that damage the common good,
the manoeuvres that revolve around money,
sacrificing families and individuals. Solidarity
then calls on the worlds of culture, sport and
entertainment to promote and enhance the birth
rate. The culture of the future cannot be based
on the individual and the mere satisfaction of
his or her rights and needs. What is needed is a
culture that cultivates the chemistry of the
whole, the beauty of giving, the value of
sacrifice.
Dear friends, I would finally like to say the
simplest and most sincere word: thank you. Thank
you for the General States of Birth, thank you
to each one of you and to all those who believe
in human life and in the future. Sometimes you
will feel as if you are shouting in the desert,
tilting against windmills. But go on, do not
give up, because it is good to dream, to dream
well and to build the future. And without a
birth rate there is no future. Thank you.
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