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Washington Post, April 9, 2005
S. African Catholics
Aren't Practicing What Pope Preached
Leaders Advocate Condoms to Curb
Spread of AIDS Virus
Author : Craig Timberg
DATELINE: JOHANNESBURG
Luyanda Ngonyama is no casual Catholic. Raised
in a religious family in a gritty township,
he dreamed of becoming a priest and spent three
years in religious training before choosing
a different path. As a lay person, he worked
for this city's diocese and for the region's
conference of bishops.
Yet here in the epicenter of the world's AIDS
pandemic, he could not abide what he considers
the church's deadly opposition to condoms.
A few months ago, he left his job with the
bishops conference and joined South Africa's
most influential AIDS activist group, the Treatment
Action Campaign. The group is a vocal advocate
of condoms as essential to curbing the spread
of HIV.
"Once you see one or two stories, these
people who would have been saved had they used
a condom, then you have a conflict," said
Ngonyama, 32. "The reality is, people
enjoy sex, even outside marriage."
Ngonyama and other South African Catholics who
support the use of condoms as a means of AIDS
prevention -- a group that includes priests,
nuns and at least one bishop -- contend their
views do not necessarily contradict those of
the late Pope John Paul II, who strenuously
opposed artificial means of contraception.
Instead, they see condoms as a tool to prevent
the spread of a disease that is killing millions
of people; any contraceptive effect is not
a valid part of the debate.
Viewed in that way, many Catholics here say that
condom use should be encouraged by a church
whose core doctrine is respect for the sanctity
of human life. A similar argument is employed
by church officials in allowing the use of
contraceptive pills to remedy irregular menstrual
cycles, which can affect fertility.
"The bottom line is to be pro-life, consistently
pro-life, from conception until death,"
said Bishop Kevin Dowling of Rustenberg, South
Africa, perhaps the best-known Catholic advocate
for condom use in South Africa. "We can't
save all lives, but we can save some lives
through the use of condoms."
He and other Catholics who support condom use
share the Vatican's view that abstinence before
marriage and fidelity within marriage are the
best ways to prevent the spread of HIV, the
virus that causes AIDS. They also generally
agree that the underlying cause of HIV's rapid
spread -- one in five working-age adults in
South Africa has the virus -- is sexual promiscuity.
Yet faced with the extent of AIDS here, many
Catholics acknowledge not enough people heed
the church's message on sexual morality to
slow the spread of the disease. That forces
a dilemma on church leaders: Some have concluded
that they have no moral choice but to advocate
condoms as the practical way to prevent infection.
Supporters of that position contend the South
African Catholic Bishops Conference made a
similar argument in a 2001 statement stating
that condom use by married couples was a matter
of conscience in cases where one partner had
HIV.
"The Church accepts that everyone has the
right to defend one's life against mortal danger.
This would include using the appropriate means
and course of action," the statement said.
Top Catholic leaders here have since made clear
that this exception was not to be taken broadly
and that another section of the statement said
using condoms "goes against human dignity."
But many people lower in the church hierarchy
have concluded that the logic of the doctrine
for married couples should apply equally to
those who are not married or to those who are
married but don't know whether they or their
spouse have HIV.
Though far from official, this argument has been
embraced by a range of South Africa's 3.1 million
Catholics. On rare occasions, Catholic-based
programs have agreed to allow the distribution
of condoms on their premises -- when the senior
church officials are not around.
Many Catholics who advocate condom use have watched
young men or women waste away and die from
a disease that can often be prevented with
relatively cheap and accessible condoms. The
Catholic Church's large and aggressive medical
response to AIDS here -- it is among the nation's
leading providers of antiretroviral drugs,
HIV counseling and hospice care -- has put
many devout Catholics in settings where the
consequences of the debate over condoms are
most profound.
"The more activist a Catholic is in the
work of [fighting] AIDS, the more likely that
person is to advocate condoms as a second line
of defense" after abstinence, said Gunther
Simmermacher, editor of the Southern Cross,
a Catholic weekly newspaper in Cape Town. "Any
Catholic who's been in a shack, in a hut, and
watched a person die of AIDS is going to say,
'Yeah, use a condom.'"
But some Catholics who advocate the use of condoms
in certain circumstances are wary of spreading
the message too widely for fear that it could
undercut the church's teaching on sexual morality.
They also say that years of condom distribution
throughout southern Africa have barely made
a dent in the spread of HIV.
Sister Christine Jacob, who oversees a rural
medical facility outside Pretoria that provides
antiretroviral drugs and other care for AIDS
sufferers, said she would counsel a 20-year-old
woman contemplating sex to abstain. And teenagers,
she said, routinely ask the clinic to provide
condoms but are denied.
"Our biggest fear is -- and this has been
proved -- by saying 'condomize,' it's giving
license" for sex, Jacob said.
But faced with a mother who had no choice but
to have sex for money to feed her family, Jacob
said she would "say to use a condom."
In the Cape Town area, the Rev. Stefan Hippler
goes much further, advocating condoms in most
circumstances where the risk of infection is
present. "I have seen too many people
dying," he said. "We are advocating
life, and here is the life of people at stake."
Ngonyama reached the same conclusion, and it
was a factor in his decision to stop working
for the church, he said. He still considers
himself committed to the faith, however, and
attends Mass each Sunday.
He says having the church out of step with public
opinion on the question of condoms drives away
the faithful, who end up looking elsewhere
for answers.
Ngonyama said he had a deeper concern: that the
opposition of the church to condoms would be
heeded by some Catholics who, as a result,
would get AIDS.
"People are listening to this," Ngonyama
said.
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