Life

Vatican says women must be involved in peace-building

Archbishop Bernardito Auza, the permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations
Archbishop Bernardito Auza, the permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations Archbishop Bernardito Auza, the permanent observer of the Holy See to the United Nations

WOMEN must be more involved in making, maintaining and building peace, the Vatican has said.

The comments were made at a UN Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace, and Security.

Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the United Nations, Archbishop Bernardito Auza addressed the meeting in New York.

The Holy See, he said, had long advocated for an increased involvement of women in making peace.

He said the Vatican appreciated initiatives promoted by the Security Council and governments to raise awareness and arrive at a fuller recognition of the vital role of women in preventing the outbreak of war through mediation and preventive diplomacy, in reconciling, rehabilitating and rebuilding societies in post-war situations, and in avoiding relapses into armed conflicts.

"Women can and should play much greater roles in all of these processes," he said.

"Their special capacities to bring order out of chaos, community out of division, and peace out of conflict and their special gifts in educating people to be more receptive and sensitive to the needs of others is essential in order to spare our world from further scourges of war and help heal the wounds of previous and present violent conflicts.

"To harness the special capacities of women in peace and security, however, an international effort should be made to enable them to succeed, something that will be difficult to achieve if women still represent a disproportionate number of the world’s disadvantaged."

Archbishop Auza added that the lack of access for women and girls to education, in particular, quality education, must be addressed.

"Sad to say, as Pope Francis pointed out in his 25 September 2015 Address to the General Assembly, not everywhere are girls and women given full access to education; most of the time, this results in condemning them to a second-class role within society and in giving them no possibility of being heard," he said.

"Education is the great enabler for women to be able to contribute fully to the promotion and consolidation of peace and harmony not only in the family, but also in local communities, and the entire world."

The Catholic Church, Archbishop Auza added, had long placed great emphasis on the absolute necessity of giving young women and girls access to education.

"Today, young women and girls constitute the majority in many of the more than 100,000 schools of the Catholic Church worldwide, from kindergarten through university, in particular, in regions where women and girls still suffer discrimination," he said.

"They learn the skills to become well-trained educators and professionals, that may greatly contribute to a secure and safe society. The priority of ensuring a quality education for girls and women is also essential if we hope that they will transmit to boys and men the necessary values to desist from violence and conflict, for the role and influence of the mother are vital in the education of children and youth in the values of peace and mutual respect, of reconciliation and healing.

"The peacemaking role of the mother in the family is of the essence not merely fora peaceful and secure home but also for a peaceful, inclusive and safe society."

Setting up women to succeed in using their talents for making, maintaining and building peace, he added, also required combating poverty and ensuring access to other fundamental resources.

"In both urban and rural areas, it is far more common for women to lack access to basic services, including health-care and social protections. In vast areas of the world, the lack of

consistent and nutritious food, clean water and sanitation services, as well as the lack of employment opportunities and decent pay, continue to undermine women's abilities to play their role in the life of their own families and society as a whole," he said.

Helping women to bring healing to the world by addressing the causes and consequences of war and violence also means protecting them in this vital mission, he added.

"The close to 50 conflicts raging in different parts of the world today call on us to concentrate our efforts on the plight of women and girls in violent situations," Archbishop Auza said.

"Women who have fallen victims to violence must be helped to overcome the stigma and the shame to which they are subjected to in certain societies, and to seek justice.

"It is so much more difficult for women to sustain the family and care for family members maimed by violence if their own wounds are not being treated and the injustices they have suffered not being remedied."