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Associated Press, December 17, 2004
Vatican Sets
Up AIDS Foundation While Cardinals Avoid Debate
on Condoms
DATELINE: VATICAN CITY
The Vatican established a foundation Friday to
fund Catholic organizations assisting AIDS
victims, urging people to contribute even if
they object to the Church's opposition to the
use of condoms to fight the spread of the disease.
Pope John Paul II has set aside $132,000 for
the Good Samaritan Foundation and is asking
"all people of good will, particularly
those in the economically advanced nations,
to contribute," said Cardinal Javier Lozano
Barragan.
The Catholic Church has repeatedly rebuffed campaigns
for it to endorse the use of condoms in the
fight against AIDS. The Vatican holds that
condoms cannot be used to help prevent the
spread of the disease because they are a form
of artificial birth control.
The pope repeated the Vatican position in a message
for the Church's World Day of the Sick in September,
saying cases of AIDS spread via intercourse
"are best avoided above all through responsible
conduct and the observance of the virtue of
chastity."
Barragan, head of the pontifical council on health
issues, said discussions of the moral issues
around AIDS should not prevent people from
contributing to the fund.
"Another thing is to help those who are
sick, who are dying, while one is discussing
condoms yes, condoms no. I don't care, what
matters to me is that people are dying and
we must help them," he said.
There have already been signs of differences
among cardinals over the question of condoms.
A Vatican cardinal, Alfonso Lopez Trujillo of
Colombia, made headlines last year when he
said condoms don't prevent AIDS and may help
spread it because they create a false sense
of security.
Later another cardinal, Godfried Danneels of
Belgium, told a Catholic TV program that if
an HIV-positive person insists on having sex,
"he has to use a condom. Otherwise he
will commit a sin" by risking transmission
of a potentially fatal virus.
<< Associated Press -- 12/17/04 >>
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