Message
from Chiara Lubich, President of Focolare Movement To
the inaugural Interdependence Day in Philadelphia (Read on Interdependence Day 2003 in Philadelphia by William Neu):
Mr.
Edward Rendell, Governor of Pennsylvania, Professor Benjamin Barber, Ladies and
Gentlemen, It is a great honor for me to address such a distinguished audience
gathered today in Philadelphia to declare their commitment to building a world
that is more united, more just and more fraternal. I would have liked to be
present in person, but since this was not possible, allow me to offer you a
brief, personal reflection through this message.
When
Professor Benjamin Barber informed me of this first World Day of Interdependence
during a long and cordial meeting in Rome last June, it was a joy for me to
support it right away. Actually the reality of interdependence calls to mind an
ideal which is very dear to me, an ideal for which I decided to give my life,
together with many people of good will involved in politics, economics and
different fields of action and study, the unity of the human family.
On
the day after September 11, many of us felt the need to reflect deeply about
the causes, but above all, to work towards a true, responsible, resolute
alternative to terrorism and war. For me, it was a little like reliving the
devastation and feeling of human powerlessness that I experienced in the
Italian city of Trent as it was bombed during World War II. And yet it was
precisely beneath the bombs that my first companions and I discovered in the
Gospel the light of mutual love which prompted us to be ready to give our lives
for one another. It was in the midst of that debris and destruction, convinced
that "Love wins everything", that we felt the strong desire to share
this love with all our neighbors, without discriminating among persons, groups,
peoples, and without paying attention to social conditions, cultures or
religious convictions. Likewise, many of us are asking today, in New York as in
Bogota, in Rome as in Nairobi, in London as in Baghdad, if it is possible to
live in a world of peoples who are free, equal and united, not only respecting
one another's identity, but also attentive to their particular needs. There is
only one answer: not only is it possible, but it is the very essence of the
political plan for humanity. While respectful of thousands of different
identities, the unity of peoples is the very goal of politics.
This
is put into question today by the violence of terrorism, war, the unjust
distribution of the world's resources and social and cultural inequities. In
many places in the world today, a cry of abandonment rises from millions of
refugees, from millions of people who are starving, from millions of people who
are exploited, from millions of unemployed who are excluded and seemingly
"cut off" from the political body. It is this separation, and not
only the privations and economic difficulties, which make them even poorer,
which increases their desperation, if this is possible.
The
goal of politics will not be reached; its vocation will not be fulfilled unless
this unity is rebuilt and these open wounds in humanity's political body are
healed. But how is it possible to reach such a demanding goal, a goal which
would appear to be beyond our strength? In front of the challenges of the
present and future of humanity, liberty and equality alone are not enough. Our
experience teaches us and we believe that there is need for a third element
long forgotten in political thought and practice: brotherhood. Without
brotherhood, no person and no people are truly free and equal, deep down.
Equality and liberty will always be incomplete and precarious until fraternity
is an integral part of the programs and political processes in every part of
the world. Dear friends, doesn't the name itself of the city you are in -
Philadelphia - evoke a program of brotherly love? Brotherhood can give new
meaning today to the reality of interdependence. Brotherhood can give rise to
projects and actions in the complex political, economic, cultural and social
tissue of our world. Brotherhood brings peoples out from isolation and opens
the door of development to those who are still excluded. Brotherhood shows the
way to peacefully resolving differences and relegates war to history books. A
lived brotherhood allows us to dream and even to hope for some kind of
communion of goods between rich countries and poor countries, since the
scandalous inequity in today's world is one of the main causes of terrorism.
The profound need for peace expressed by humanity today indicates that
brotherhood is not only a value, not only a method, but it is a global paradigm
for political development. This is why a world that is always more interdependent
needs politicians, entrepreneurs, intellectuals and artists who put brotherhood
- a tool of unity - at the center of their actions and thoughts. Martin Luther
King dreamed that brotherhood would become the order of the day for
businesspersons and the password for statesmen and women.
Dear
friends, what a change would take place in relationships among individuals,
groups and peoples if only we would recognize that we are all children of one
Father, God, who is Love and who loves each one personally and immensely and
who takes care of everyone!
This
love, translated into infinitely many forms, including politics and economics,
would lead to overcoming narrow-minded nationalism and limited perspectives,
opening the minds and hearts of peoples and their governments, urging everyone
- as I affirmed in a speech to the United Nations in New York in 1997 - to love
the others' country as their own. This is the decades-long experience of the Focolare Movement, present in 182 countries of the world by
now, with millions and millions of adherents around the globe. My wish for this
first World Day of Interdependence then, is that it will be an opportunity for
all those supporting it, to have a new commitment to live and work together for
the unity of the whole human family, always helping one another out with
dedication and trust. (Translated from
Italian)