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Last Updated: Friday - 09/24/2010


Week of November 24, 2008


Solidarity key to ending financial crisis – lay leader


By Catholic News Service
Nicosia, Cyprus


The world economic crisis is, at root, the result of a lack of humanity and solidarity, said the founder of the Community of Sant'Egidio.

"In order to build a world of well-being for a few, we have given growth to a world of pain for many," Andrea Riccardi, founder of the Rome-based lay movement, said Nov. 18.

"Too much has been overlooked: all that regards the human person and the spirit," Riccardi told the closing ceremony of an interreligious gathering for peace.

"Today, in the midst of a global crisis of great proportions, one for which all the consequences cannot be seen, we feel a need to affirm that the economy and finance are not everything," he said.

Riccardi asked for a renewed commitment to dialogue and to care for those who are hurting.

"It is what has been missing - the essential simplicity of being true, human, brothers and sisters, peaceful."

Hundreds of Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Sikh and other religious leaders gathered Nov. 16-18 in Nicosia.

The goal of the conference was to promote interreligious dialogue, the peaceful resolution of conflicts and joint action to alleviate poverty and human suffering.

In their final statement, the leaders said: "We are at a difficult point in history. Many certainties are shaken by the economic crisis that has seized our world. Many people are pessimistic about the future."

And, they said, while "richer countries focus on protecting their own citizens, a very high price for the crisis will be paid by the poorest of the world.

"We are deeply concerned about the millions of old and new poor people, victims of a market thought of as almighty."

A religious reaction to the crisis cannot be based on pessimism and self-protection, the leaders said. Instead, it is time to pay greater attention to those who suffer and make a renewed commitment to laying "the foundation of a new world order of peace."

"The quest for justice, the use of dialogue and respect for the weak are the tools we need to build this new world order," they said. "We need a surplus of spirit and a greater sense of humanity."

Cardinal Renato Martino, president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, told the gathering that the economic crisis threatens peace and the global battle against poverty.

While the world's richest countries struggle to come up with the $50 billion needed to keep their Millennium Development Goals' commitments for reducing poverty, the United States has found $700 billion to bail out failing financial institutions, the cardinal said.

World leaders must recognize that the crisis can have a serious impact on peace and stability in the world's poorest nations, Martino said.

Programs to alleviate the crisis must include "a new global social and ethical pact," one that would stimulate businesses, strengthen regulation and promote solidarity, he said.


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