MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR WORLD FOOD DAY 2023
His Excellency
Mr. Qu Dongyu
Director-General of FAO
Your Excellency,
World Food Day is being celebrated at a time
when many of our brothers and sisters are
suffering from poverty and discouragement.
Indeed, the cries of anguish and despair of the
poor should awaken us from the lethargy that
grips us, and appeals to our consciences. The
condition of hunger and malnutrition that
seriously wounds so many human beings is the
result of an iniquitous accumulation of
injustices and inequalities that leaves many
stranded in the gutter of life and allows a few
to settle in a state of ostentation and
opulence. This applies not only to food, but
also to all basic resources, the inaccessibility
of which for many people represents an affront
to their intrinsic, God-given dignity. It is
indeed an insult that should make the whole of
humanity ashamed, and mobilize the international
community.
In this sense, the theme at the heart of this
year's World Water Day reflections, "Water is
life, water is food. Leave no one behind",
invites us to highlight the irreplaceable value
of this resource for all living beings on our
planet, from which derives the urgent need to
plan and implement its management in a wise,
careful and sustainable way, so that everyone
can enjoy it to satisfy their substantive needs,
and so that adequate human development can also
be sustained and promoted, without anyone being
excluded.
Water is life because it guarantees survival;
however, today this resource is threatened by
serious challenges in terms of quantity and
quality. In many parts of the world, our
brothers and sisters suffer from diseases or die
precisely because of the absence or scarcity of
drinking water. Droughts caused by climate
change are leaving vast regions barren and
wreaking enormous havoc on ecosystems and
populations. The arbitrary management of water
resources, their distortion and pollution, are
particularly damaging to the poor and are a
shameful affront to which we cannot remain
indifferent. On the contrary, we must urgently
recognize that “access to safe drinking water is
a basic and universal human right, since it is
essential to human survival and, as such, is a
condition for the exercise of other human
rights” (Encyclical Laudato si', no. 30). It is
therefore essential to invest more in
infrastructure, in sewage networks, in
sanitation and wastewater treatment systems,
particularly in the most remote and depressed
rural areas. It is also important to develop
educational and cultural models that raise
society's awareness of the need to respect and
preserve this primary asset. Water must never be
seen as a mere commodity, a product to be traded
or a commodity to be speculated on.
Water is food because it is essential to
achieving food security, being a means of
production and an indispensable component of
agriculture. In crops, there is a need to
promote effective programmes to prevent losses
in agricultural irrigation pipes; to use organic
and inorganic pesticides and fertilizers that do
not pollute water; and to encourage measures to
safeguard the availability of water resources to
prevent acute shortages from becoming a cause of
conflict between communities, peoples and
nations. Furthermore, science and technological
and digital innovation must be placed at the
service of a sustainable balance between
consumption and available resources, avoiding
negative impacts on ecosystems and irreversible
damage to the environment. For this reason,
international organizations, governments, civil
society, business, academic and research
institutions, as well as other entities, must
join forces and unite ideas so that water is
everyone's heritage, is better distributed and
is managed in a sustainable and rational way.
Finally, the celebration of World Food Day
should also serve as a reminder that the
throwaway culture must be incisively countered
by actions based on responsible and loyal
cooperation on the part of everyone. Our world
is too interdependent and cannot afford to be
divided into blocs of countries that promote
their interests in a spurious and biased way. We
are called instead to think and act in terms of
community, of solidarity, seeking to prioritize
the lives of all over the appropriation of goods
by the few.
Mr. General Director, regrettably we are
witnessing today a scandalous polarization of
international relations due to the existing
crises and confrontations. Huge financial
resources and innovative technologies that could
be used to make water a source of life and
progress for all are being diverted to arms
production and trade. Never before has it been
more urgent to become promoters of dialogue and
peacemakers. The Church never tires of sowing
those values that will build a civilization that
finds in love, mutual respect and reciprocal
help a compass to guide its steps, turning above
all to those brothers and sisters who suffer
most, such as the hungry and the thirsty.
With these wishes, as I thank the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
for all it does to promote agricultural
development, healthy and sufficient nutrition
for every person and the sustainable use of
water, I invoke abundant heavenly blessings on
all those who strive for a better and more
fraternal world.
From the Vatican, 16 October 2023
FRANCIS
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Holy See Press Office Bulletin, 16 October 2023
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