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Deutsche Welle (Germany), August
19, 2005
Reformers Turn
Up the Heat at World Youth Day in Germany
Critics have been present at World Youth Day,
bringing up issues such as the role of women,
family planning and gay rights. There are signs
that the gap between them and church leaders
is narrowing.
As World Youth Day (WYD) enters its climactic
phase with the arrival of Pope Benedict XVI
on Thursday, church critics are also stepping
up their activities. A number of reform organizations
from around the world have been handing out
flyers and staging events in the city of Cologne
in an attempt to reach the young people attending
the Catholic festival.
United under the umbrella of the "World
Youth Day 4 All Coalition" (WYD4All),
they have set up their base for the duration
of the gathering in a church in the city center.
While there is hardly any room given to controversial
issues in the official WYD program, young believers'
response to critical questions has been enormous,
says Aisha Taylor, program director of the
US-based Women's Ordination Conference.
"The possibility for priests to get married,
the rights of gays and lesbians, more democratic
participation for lay people -- all these are
points on which we would like to see progress,"
she said.
Women priests unsettle leaders
A particular focus of Taylor's work concerns
the role of women in the church. According
to official doctrine women cannot be become
priests.
"When seven women were ordained priests
in 2002 by a dissident bishop in Austria, the
Vatican excommunicated the women within a week
or so," Taylor, 24, said.
At the time, it was Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,
then head of the Congregation for the Doctrine
of the Faith and now Pope Benedict XVI, who
lead the charge against them.
Yet, judging from responses from the people thronging
the streets of Cologne, equal rights for women
in the church consistently rank among the top
demands, reports Taylor, who sees the demonstrative
ordination of women also as a way to elicit
a direct response from the Vatican.
"The pope is getting annoyed and knows who
we are," she said. "But we have to
use these alternative paths to make our opinions
known, because the church is not a democracy
and its members have no vote."
Even if Benedict XVI refuses to recognize women
priests, in the future another pope could make
a cut with the past, she says. And the ongoing
effort by reformers is having an impact, she
adds: "We now have female altar service
and women who work as Eucharistic ministers.
And in a letter the pope, then a cardinal,
made a point of the equality of men and women
in public life -- except in the church context."
Latin American concerns
In other regions of the world, such as Latin
America, where a large majority of the population
is Catholic, there is not necessarily a less
critical view than in Europe or North America.
"The church has a lot of spiritual and political
power in our part of the world," said
25-year-old Andrea Ramirez from Bolivia who
heads the youth chapter of the "We Are
Church" reform movement in her home country.
"But there is also strong support for
the gay movement or the feminists."
"We want to show that you can be a good
Catholic and be gay or lesbian. Or that you
can be a good Catholic and use condoms,"
she said.
The ongoing refusal by the Vatican to soften
its stance on family planning or the use of
condoms is particularly detrimental to poor
countries, says Ramirez.
"But maybe the pope hasn't had enough time,
yet, to properly get in touch with the very
real problems of the nations of the south."
The refusal by conservative church leaders to
engage in debate sometimes takes forms that
amount to keeping information away from young
believers, critics say.
We have seen how nuns accompanying a group
of young Catholics took away from them the
flyers we had just handed out to them,
reports Agnes Rudnik, a spokeswoman for the
gay and lesbian groups at WYD.
Cheer the pope, follow your conscience - no
problem
So is it a contradiction that young people attending
WYD are welcoming the pope with overwhelming
enthusiasm, yet feel strongly about a number
contentious issues on which they are opposed
to the pontiff, as reformers claim?
"I dont think there is a contradiction
when people cheer the pope and follow their
conscience at the same time, says Tobias
Raschke, the German spokesman for "We
Are Church. "Young people feel it
is their church and sincerely want the pope
to understand what their concerns are.
The critics make a strong point that they are
part of the church and do consider themselves
firmly rooted in the faith.
"I really hope our work gives a new impetus
for change to the pope, because hes my
religious leader after all, says Ramirez.
I love my faith and the Catholic Church,
its my heritage, my tradition",
says Aisha Taylor.
Signs of change
While WYD is an event that appeals to the masses,
many young reformers agree that behind it there
is a genuine attempt to reach out to the younger
generation. The efforts and successes of the
church in tackling social problems, injustice
and poverty around the world is something that
draws particularly strong support from young
people.
One of the few events WYD organizers put on to
engage young people in an open debate focused
on precisely these themes called "YouthHearing."
Held at a community center in Cologne on Wednesday
afternoon, there was rapturous applause from
the floor when critics brought up the ban on
condom use, which in their view undermines
the fight against HIV/AIDS in poor countries.
In their response, German Bishop Reinhard Marx
and Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez from Honduras
stopped just short of actively endorsing condoms,
but acknowledged that they can play an important
role.
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