Saturday, January 28, 2017

A challenge not yet won

This morning, the Holy See Press Centre published the text of a Message written by the Prefect of the Dicastery for the Promotion of Integral Human Development, His Eminence, Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson, on the occasion of the 64th World Leprosy Day (Hansen's Disease) which will be celebrated tomorrow: Sunday, January 29, 2017.


Message of His Eminence, Cardinal Peter Turkson
for World Leprosy Day

The eradication of leprosy and the reintegration of people afflicted by hanseniasis:
a challenge not yet won

The development of effective pharmacological therapies and the major efforts at a planetary level of many national and international institutions and agencies, with the Catholic Church in the front line, over the last decades have inflicted a very severe blow on Hansen’s disease, known more commonly as leprosy. Hanseniasis, which in the year 1985 still afflicted over five million people in the world, today has about 200,000 new cases each year, but much – very much – still has to be done.

For that matter, as it was highlighted last June at the end of the symposium Towards Holistic Care for People with Hansen’s Disease Respectful of their Dignity, which was organized by the then Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers, every new case of Hansen’s disease is one case too many, as is every residual form of stigma attached to it. Every law that discriminates against patients with Hansen’s disease is one law too many, as is every form of indifference. Within the framework of the initiative promoted in cooperation with the Nippon Foundation-Sasakawa Health Foundation, with the contribution of the Order of Malta, the Raoul Follereau Foundation and the Good Samaritan Foundation, it was further emphasized that given their role, it is important for the leaders of all religions, in their teachings, writings and speeches, to contribute to the elimination of discrimination against people afflicted by Hansen’s disease. On the other hand, as was also emphasized subsequently by the World Health Organization during the World Forum on hanseniasis held in Seoul in November, that physical and psychological care should be provided to patients during and after the end of their treatment.

In addition, we should all commit ourselves – and at all levels – to ensuring that in all countries policies relating to the family, to work, to schools, to sports, and to policies of every other kind, that directly or indirectly discriminate against these people are changed, and that governments develop implementing plans that involve people with this disease.

Lastly, strengthening scientific research in order to develop new medical products, and obtain better diagnostic instruments in order to increase the possibility of early diagnosis, is fundamental.

Indeed, in large part new cases are identified only when the infection has provoked permanent lesions and has marked, by now for life, the adults or boys or girls who have this disease. On the other hand, especially in the most remote areas, it is difficult to assure the assistance that is needed to finish the treatment or it is difficult for the patients themselves to understand the importance of – or give priority to – continuing with the pharmacological treatment where this has been begun.

But treatment is not enough. A person who has been cured of this disease must be reintegrated to the full into his or her original social fabric: his or her family, community, school, or work environment.

In order to promote and contribute to this process of reintegration, which for that matter remains almost impossible in many contexts, associations of former patients should be further supported and encouraged. At the same time, the spread of communities, with these former patients, should be promoted which – as has already taken place, for example, in India, in Brazil and in Ghana – become real families who understand and welcome people, offering a fertile terrain for mutual aid and authentic brotherhood.

With reflection upon the healing of the man with leprosy by Jesus narrated in the first chapter of the Gospel According to Mark, Christ moved with pity … stretched out his hand, touched him, and said to him: 'I will do it. Be made clean'. The leprosy left him immediately, and he was made clean. Then he said to him, 'See that you tell no one anything but go, show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing what Moses prescribed; that will be proof for them’.

Thus it was that Jesus not only healed the person in his entirety but also called on the man whom he healed to go to the one who could declare his full reintegration into society, his readmission into the human consortium.

Perhaps today as yesterday this is one of the greatest obstacles to be overcome for those who have been marked by hansensiasis and for those who work for them. The disabilities, the unmistakeable signs left behind by this disease, are still today similar to brands. Fear of this disease, which is one of the most feared in human history, defies reason; lack of knowledge by a community about this pathology excludes those who have been cured of it, who, in their turn, because of the suffering and the forms of discrimination that they have endured, have lost the sense of dignity that belongs to them and is inalienable even though their bodies have mutilations. For them, and above all with people who are victims of leprosy, we must engage ourselves more deeply so that they can find welcome, solidarity and justice.

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