Pope Francis sent greetings to participants in a Day of Reflection on environmental and social issues pertaining to the mining industry. The meeting, which took place last Saturday (September 7) was organized by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace.
Executives from
some of largest mining companies were present at this gathering, including African
Rainbow Minerals, Anglo American, AngloGold Ashanti, Areva, Baker Hughes, BHP
Billiton, China Minmetals Corporation, Curis Resources, Fortescue, MMG,
Newmont, Rio Tinto and Zamin Resources. Also present were several Church
representatives from the Secretariat of State and Caritas Internationalis.
Message
of the Holy Father, Pope Francis
to Mining Industry Representatives
for the Day of Reflection
Cardinal Peter Turkson
President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace
Vatican City
President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace
Vatican City
Your Eminence,
On behalf of the Holy Father, I am pleased to greet the
executives of the mining industry who have gathered together at the Pontifical
Council for Justice and Peace, in order to study the principal ethical problems
arising from their activities, especially in Africa and in other developing
regions of the world. His Holiness also wishes to extend his greeting to
everyone involved in mining activities: the workers and their families, the
unions, the local communities and the various states in which mineral resources
are found.
This day of reflection, promoted by Your Eminence, takes
on particular importance not only because it brings together leaders of many
multinational corporations involved in this sector – Christians, followers of
other religions, and non-believers – but above all because it is the first
occasion in which senior mining executives have come together, close to the
Successor of Peter, to reflect on the importance of their human and
environmental responsibilities. In other words, they wish to make a serious
examination of conscience on what must be done so that their industry may offer
a constant positive contribution to integral human development.
The extraction industries are seen, not always without
reason, as unjustly exploiting resources and local populations, resorting even
to slavery and to the forced removal of entire populations. An ancient proverb
of the People of Israel says, The fathers
have eaten sour grapes and the children’s teeth are set on edge (Jer
31:29). This warning is perennially valid; it not only alludes to the
complexity of ethical questions, difficult to resolve with one answer that is
valid for all, but also reminds us of the seriousness of our human actions.
Mining, like many other industrial activities, has ecological and social
consequences which go well beyond national borders and pass from one generation
to the next.
The participants at this meeting are aware that, so as
not to repeat grave errors of the past, decisions today cannot be made based
solely on geological perspectives or the possible economic benefits for
investors and for the states in which the companies are based. A new and more
profound decision-making process is indispensable and inescapable, one which
takes into consideration the complexity of the problems involved, in a context
of solidarity. Such a context requires, first of all, that workers be assured
of all their economic and social rights, in full accordance with the norms and
recommendations of the International Labour Organization. Likewise it requires
the assurance that extraction activities respect international standards for
the protection of the environment. The great challenge of business leaders is
to create a harmony of interests, involving investors, managers, workers, their
families, the future of their children, the preservation of the environment on
both a regional and international scale, and a contribution to world peace.
The present meeting may not be able to provide an answer
to the many challenges which confront the mining executives in their
decision-making. Nevertheless, the Holy Father prays that the meeting in your
Dicastery may lead to such a process guided by moral principles which seek the
good of all parties involved in the sector. This will enable the industry’s
leaders to face the difficulties that arise, with special attention to miners
and their families, to the surrounding population, to the environment, and to
global and intergenerational solidarity. Local churches will surely wish to
imitate your Pontifical Council’s solicitude, and place themselves at the
service of miners, so as to help them develop an ever more integral vision of
this question.
His Holiness assures all those involved in mining
activities around the world of his closeness in prayer. Upon you, your
co-workers, employees and workers, the Holy Father cordially invokes abundant
divine blessings.
Yours sincerely in Christ,
Tarcisio Cardinal Bertone
Secretary of State
Tarcisio Cardinal Bertone
Secretary of State
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