The pope released a message to participants in an international symposium on the “Dignity and rights of the
mentally handicapped.” The meeting took place from January 7 to 9 in the Vatican and was organized by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The meeting coincides with the end of the Year of Handicapped People in Europe.
“Handicapped people,” reads the message, “even when they have mental limitations or sensorial and intellectual handicaps, are completely human subjects with the sacred and inalienable rights due to every human creature. Only when the rights of the weakest members of a society are recognized can a society say that it is founded on law and justice.”
The Holy Father emphasizes that “a society that only gives space to its fully functioning members who are totally autonomous and independent, is not a society worthy of man. Discrimination based on efficiency is no less condemnable than discrimination based on race, sex or religion.”
“In addition to any other consideration or specific interest or group,” he continues, “it is necessary to try to promote the integral good of these people, without denying them the help and protection necessary even when it may mean a greater social and economic burden. Perhaps even more than other sick people, the mentally retarded need attention, affection, understanding and love: we cannot leave them alone, unarmed and defenseless, in the difficult duty of confronting life.”
John Paul II writes in this sense that “care for the affective and sexual dimensions of handicapped people is also worthy of attention. They also need to love and be loved, they need affection, closeness and intimacy. Unfortunately, handicapped people must live these legitimate and natural needs in a disadvantaged situation which becomes ever more evident with the passage from childhood to adulthood. They seek authentic relationships in which they can be appreciated and recognized as persons.”
“Without a doubt,” he adds, “handicapped people, revealing the radical fragility of the human condition, are an expression of the drama of sorrow and in this world of ours, so eager for hedonism and fascinated by ephemeral and false beauty, and their difficulties are frequently perceived as a scandal and a provocation, their problems as a weight that must be gotten rid of or resolved as soon as possible.”
The pope concludes the message by highlighting that these persons “can teach everyone what is love and how to be promoters of a new world, not dominated by force, violence and aggressiveness any more, but by love, solidarity, acceptance, a new world transformed by the light of Christ, the Son of God incarnate, who was crucified and rose from the dead.”