by Justin Catanoso
- In a 94-page document entitled “Querida Amazonia” (Dear Amazon), Pope Francis has made an impassioned plea for world leaders, transnational companies, and people everywhere to step up and protect the Amazon rainforest along with the indigenous people who live there and are its best stewards.
- The Amazon is seeing rapid deforestation in Brazil, Peru, Bolivia and Colombia, while violence against indigenous people is rising. Scientists say climate change and deforestation are forcing a forest-to-savanna tipping point, which could lead to a massive tree die-off, the release of huge amounts of CO2, and global climate catastrophe.
- “We are water, air, earth and life of the environment created by God,” Pope Francis writes in Dear Amazon. “For this reason, we demand an end to the mistreatment and destruction of mother Earth. The land has blood, and it is bleeding; the multinationals have cut the veins of our mother Earth.”
- Faith leaders applauded the pope: “Care for creation and… social justice for indigenous peoples and forest communities are part of one moral fabric,” said Joe Corcoran of the Interfaith Rainforest Initiative. But most media ignored the pope’s message, focusing instead on his verdict disallowing Amazon priests from marrying.
Pope Francis meets Jose Gregorio Diaz Mirabal, a member of the Curripaco indigenous community, during a session of the Synod of Bishops for the Amazon at the Vatican, October 8, 2019. Image courtesy of CNS photo/Vatican Media.
Pope Francis, in an effort to reignite his influence as a global environmental leader, released an impassioned document February 12 entitled Dear Amazon — a response to the historic Vatican meeting last autumn regarding the fate of the Amazon biome and its indigenous people.
In a 94-page “
The document comes as the Amazon faces “
Dear Amazon isn’t only addressed to Catholics, but “to all persons of good will.” It sums up the findings of a three-week Vatican synod, a formal meeting held last October that brought together for the first-time hundreds of Catholic bishops, indigenous leaders and environmental activists from nine South American countries with territory in the Amazon. Francis’ post-synod response is organized into four “dreams:” societal, cultural, ecclesial and ecological.
His plea in defense of the rainforest is at once scientific, humanistic, political, and spiritual: “If the care of people and the care of ecosystems are inseparable, this becomes especially important in places where the forest is not a resource to be exploited; it is a being, or various beings, with which we have to relate,” Francis writes in the ecological section. “When indigenous peoples remain on their land, they themselves care for it best, provided they do not let themselves be taken in by the siren song and self-serving proposals of power groups.”
Francis joins with Amazon scientists and activists in their alarm. Rapidly escalating deforestation in the biome is already
Top scientists are already warning that climate change and deforestation could be causing the Amazon to cross a critical rainforest-to-savanna
That warning comes as Brazil, which includes much of the Amazon basin, has been beset by
But as
Pope Francis seated beneath a giant cross in Puerto Maldonado, Peru during his 2018 trip to South America. On that visit, he condemned Amazon deforestation being carried out by South American and other nations as well as large corporations. Photo by Luis Fernandez courtesy of the Centro de Innovación Científica Amazónica.
Defending nature — again
Dear Amazon stands as an emphatic complement to
Laudato Si established Francis on the world stage as an ecumenical leader and advocate for environmental protection. He bluntly blamed human activity for global warming and castigated rampant consumerism and unbridled capitalism as hastening the destruction of the earth.
Myriad faith communities around the globe were inspired to organize and act on the pope’s urgings. However, the controversial manifesto met with
The message of Dear Amazon seems even more urgent than the 2015 encyclical, coming in response to the rapidly worsening Amazon emergency: “We are water, air, earth and life of the environment created by God,” Francis writes. “For this reason, we demand an end to the mistreatment and destruction of mother Earth. The land has blood, and it is bleeding; the multinationals have cut the veins of our mother Earth.”
Laudauto Si was released when the progressive pope was at the height of global popularity, and it was heralded and cited for months by international media. But the urgent call of Dear Amazon has so far been largely ignored. Mainstream media accounts in the past week instead focused almost exclusively on Francis’ decision to not allow the marriage of priests serving in the Amazon as a way of boosting their dramatically diminished numbers.
Pope Francis at the opening Mass for the Amazon synod October 6, 2019. The administration of President Jair Bolsonaro was highly critical of the synod, seeing it as interference with Brazil’s internal affairs. Image by Daniel Ibanez / CNA.
People of Faith respond
Francis won’t likely be standing down without a fight. He calls on Latin American governments to enforce their environmental protection laws, return land rights to indigenous peoples, and recognize that Amazonian rainforests are more than an economic resource to be monetized for “extraction, energy, timber and other industries that destroy and pollute.”
“The equilibrium of our planet depends on the health of the Amazon region,” Francis writes. “Together with the biome of the Congo and Borneo, it contains a dazzling diversity of woodlands on which rain cycles, climate balance and a great variety of living beings also depend.”
Faith leaders contacted by Mongabay looked past Vatican politics and cheered the pope’s message in Dear Amazon, saying that it is invigorating their conservation work and strategies.
“Protecting rainforests is fundamentally an ethical issue, where care for creation and the realization of social justice for indigenous peoples and forest communities are part of one moral fabric,” said Joe Corcoran, the UN project manager for the
“Through IRI, we are seeing that not only is the leadership of Pope Francis rallying Catholics to act, but [it is] also inspiring religious leaders from other faiths to protect rainforests around the world,” Corcoran said.
Laura Vargas leads IRI’s
Meanwhile, at London-based Christian Aid, a global environmental activism organization, spokesman Joe Ware said, “The pope remains one of the most popular and loved pope’s with significant influence not just over one billion Catholics, but of many others, too.”
Ware stressed that 2020 is a crucial year, the year the Paris Agreement
“It’s vital,” Ware said, “that we have the voice of the Catholic Church and people of faith around the world pushing political leaders this year to make the boldest decisions possible.”
Seeing the Amazon gravely at risk, the Vatican has called on governments and the people of the world to protect the world’s largest remaining rainforest. Image by Rhett A. Butler / Mongabay.
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Related to SDG 13: Climate action and SDG 10: Reduced inequalities