Amazon environmental destruction - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 06 Oct 2022 08:04:21 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Amazon environmental destruction - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Emmy-winning director's doco on Francis and the environment launched https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/10/06/the-letter-emmy-directors-doco-pope-laudato-si-environment/ Thu, 06 Oct 2022 07:08:52 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=152664 The Letter - Laudato Si

A new documentary, "The Letter," premiered at the Vatican this week. Available on YouTube, Emmy-winner Nicholas Brown's doco is about the Pope's 2015 encyclical (letter) Laudato Sì' and how ordinary people can make his vision a reality. Francis addressed the encyclical to "all people of good will", urging an interconnected vision for humanity and the Read more

Emmy-winning director's doco on Francis and the environment launched... Read more]]>
A new documentary, "The Letter," premiered at the Vatican this week.

Available on YouTube, Emmy-winner Nicholas Brown's doco is about the Pope's 2015 encyclical (letter) Laudato Sì' and how ordinary people can make his vision a reality.

Francis addressed the encyclical to "all people of good will", urging an interconnected vision for humanity and the planet.

Brown, who has directed many environment-focused documentaries, hopes the movie will encourage people.

We need to "abandon illusions of otherness and come together" to protect the environment, he says.

The Letter premiered on Tuesday - St Francis of Assisi's feast day. The pope's namesake was known for his commitment to peace, to the impoverished and to the environment.

The premiere also coincided with the day the Paris Climate Agreement accords came into effect at the Vatican.

The 80-minute feature focuses on how people at the grassroots level - rather than governments - can bring about change.

In the doco, a diverse group of climate activists, Indigenous people, scientists and faithful meet with Francis (see image) to discuss the environment.

One activist is Chief Cacique Odair "Dadá" of the Borari people. He was captured and tortured by mercenaries after he used GPS technology to expose the illegal activity of loggers who were destroying his Brazilian Amazon rainforest home.

Under the leadership of President Jair Bolsonaro, who has led Brazil since 2018, the country has been rapidly deforested. Elections in the country are currently deciding who will lead the country in the future.

"I am here in the name of the forest, in the name of the Indigenous population," said Dadá at the Vatican press conference for the premiere.

He advocated for "a new kind of politics" that protects the environment and those most affected by its destruction.

"Today we suffer the destruction of the forest firsthand," he said. "I hope that all presidents in all countries will come together to save and protect the forest."

"Voices from the peripheries are usually ignored in global summits and environmental decision-making, typically dominated by powerful corporate interests," says Cardinal Michael Czerny.

The Cardinal, who heads the Vatican Department for Promoting Integral Human Development, had grim words to say at the premiere.

Listing the "new normal" of heatwaves, hurricanes, droughts and floods that occur all over the planet, Czerny said the doco provides "a pathway" for encounter and dialogue among people.

"The film and the personal stories powerfully show that the ecological crisis has arrived and is happening now.

"The time is over for speculation, for scepticism and denial, for irresponsible populism that protects the environment and those most affected by its destruction."

The documentary's essence is to bring the Pope's letter to new audiences, says Laudato Sì' Movement president Lorna Gold. The Movement includes a network of over 900 Catholic organisations acting and lobbying for the environment.

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Chair Hoesung Lee was also at the premiere.

Faith and science must come together to find solutions, as "the stakes have never been higher," he says.

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Church must seek new paths in the Amazon region https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/09/16/church-amazon-synod-deforestation-laudato-si/ Mon, 16 Sep 2019 08:07:53 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=121220

The Church must look for new ways to make people feel welcome, say the special secretaries of next month's synod on the Amazon. Cardinal-designate Michael Czerny and Bishop David Martinez De Aguirre Guinea say the synod's focus, "Amazonia: New paths for the church and for an integral ecology," will help the church make its presence Read more

Church must seek new paths in the Amazon region... Read more]]>
The Church must look for new ways to make people feel welcome, say the special secretaries of next month's synod on the Amazon.

Cardinal-designate Michael Czerny and Bishop David Martinez De Aguirre Guinea say the synod's focus, "Amazonia: New paths for the church and for an integral ecology," will help the church make its presence felt and voice heard in the Amazon region.

The rainforest region crosses nine countries in South America. It has experienced significant deforestation, negatively impacting the indigenous populations in the area and leading to a loss of biodiversity.

Czerny and Martinez say the synod will take place at a time when the region is approaching "a point of no return," and "both human and natural life are suffering serious and perhaps irreversible destruction".

In an article entitled "Why the Amazon merits a synod," they say the synod is an effort to implement Pope Francis's encyclical on the environment, Laudato Si'.

The encyclical observes the "gross inequality and cruel marginalization" caused by financial and consumerist greed and calls "for a new attitude toward nature and the social environment."

It's a wake-up call to the entire world, to all of humanity, Czerny and Martinez say.

"But it also suggests a new socio-pastoral orientation and dynamic for the church, which must understand the challenges faced by individuals and families and groups within these various dimensions."

However, the church cannot give spiritual guidance and pastoral care if people are understood in isolation.

It needs to be integrated with people as well - how they live and function within the actual natural, economic and social conditions that they face.

Czerny and Martinez say the environmental problems are not the only ones besetting the region.

"Mercantilism, secularization, the throwaway culture and the idolatry of money" coupled with decreasing numbers of priests and religious "is endangering the presence of the Catholic Church among the indigenous peoples of the Amazon.

These types of challenge require a response that moves from a "ministry of visits to a ministry of presence," Czerny and Martinez say.

"This is why, during the October Synod, the entire world should walk with the people of the Amazon; not to expand or divert the agenda, but to help the synod to make a difference.

"The Amazon region is huge, and its challenges are immense. If destroyed, the impacts will be felt worldwide."

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