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This article was posted on National Review Online during Pope Benedict XVI’s March 17-23 visit to Africa.

Benedict XVI is in the middle of a week-long trip to Africa, his first visit to the continent as pope.

There are many issues in African Christianity that are fascinating and worthwhile, from the church’s social advocacy on corruption and governance, to the continent’s evangelical religious upheaval. But you probably will not be hearing about them. No — the media coverage of Benedict’s Africa visit will revolve mostly around one thing: condoms.

The Vatican’s position on artificial contraception, elaborated in Pope Paul VI’s 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae, is one of the Catholic Church’s most enduringly unpopular dogmas. From a public-relations point of view, the church’s take on condoms is the Catholic equivalent of Bible-thumpers’ creationist weirdness. Both viewpoints are, to the average semi-rational Westerner, some combination of unjustifiably absolutist and embarrassingly backward. As a French NGO worker in Cameroon, where Benedict arrived Tuesday, quipped, “Is the pope living in the 21st century?”

The pope, as everyone knows, has a knack for mis-explaining his views — or sometimes over-explaining them, his nuances soaring well over the heads of illiterate Muslim radicals and the press corps alike. The condom issue is the perfect opportunity to be misunderstood, and Benedict performed in line with expectations. Even before touching down in Africa, the pontiff reaffirmed the Vatican’s position from his Alitalia charter by saying that the continent’s AIDS epidemic “cannot be overcome through the distribution of condoms, which even aggravates the problems.”

This may sound rather baffling to a person who “knows” (we will get to hitches in that “knowledge” in a moment) that condoms do prevent, as a medical certainty, the transmission of HIV if used properly.

Knowing this — and perhaps only this — the pope’s critics have not labored themselves with the details. The most polemic accuse the pontiff of nothing less than abetting murder. Others, like CNN’s Roland Martin, sneer at the Vatican’s “ignorance of reality,” a label that fits neatly with the usual caricature of the “conservative” Benedict or his “ultraconservative” cohort as being dramatically out of touch with everyday human reality.

The pope, of course, is not actually “ignorant.” The Vatican knows well what it is doing, and the church is not deaf to the suffering of those Africans living with AIDS. Indeed, Catholic Relief Services and Caritas Internationalis (the U.S. and worldwide Catholic relief agencies respectively) are leaders in distributing antiretroviral drugs, and in so doing have saved thousands of lives.

But the Vatican’s message on preventing HIV in the first place is often muddled. So here, for the record, is a summation of the Catholic argument. It begins with the premise that while the AIDS epidemic is the result of a virus, it is as much a social as a viral illness. It is not something one catches merely by inhalation or shaking hands or other passive contact. The transmission of HIV in the vast majority of cases can be traced to an elective and deliberate act of sexual intercourse.

Thus, the Catholic logic goes, the disease should be treated essentially as a social ailment. The goal should be to promote widespread delays in becoming sexually active among young people and, when they grow up, encourage them to form committed relationships. Merely mediating a risky behavior with mechanical prophylaxis is wrong because it gives tacit permission to the sex act, and undercuts the moral authority of these larger social goals. In any case, if condoms are to be used regardless, the church should not sully its own approach.

This strikes me as a fairly solid argument, one that deserves a thoughtful reply. But, once the knee-jerk reactions are put to one side, the public-health lobby’s reply is to lament how “unrealistic” the pope is being. The Catholic position seems naïve to the average Westerner who, thinking of himself and his own society’s inability to regulate its collective sexuality, applies this lesson on the impossibility of self-restraint to the whole globe.

In fact, such Westerners, before they criticize Benedict for being unrealistic, may first want to calibrate their own sense of reality to African standards. Because where abstinence and monogamy have been most vigorously promoted, the HIV-infection rate has declined the most dramatically. Particularly, this is true of Uganda, where evangelical Christian influences have imbued the country’s AIDS policy with a moralizing outlook and an emphasis squarely on behavior change. The message was: You have the power to change your behavior and, if you do not, you may very well die.

It proved to be startlingly effective. In spite of the expectations of public-health wonks, Uganda saw a “60% reduction in casual sex . . . equivalent to a vaccine of 80% effectiveness,” according to a review of the policy published in the journal Science. In the wake of the policy’s implementation, Uganda became one of the first African countries to post a decline in the HIV-infection rate.

In contrast, there is little reason to treat condoms as an implement beyond reproach in the fight against AIDS. Let us consider their mere mechanics. In Africa, they have a fail rate per usage of anywhere from 1 to 4 percent. Let’s assume a sexually active teen or 20-something — those age-groups most at risk — takes advantage of the supposedly care-free sex that condoms bequeath to their users, and has sexual relations 100 times over a year or two. Now, statistically, the condom will fail one to four times biannually, in a place where perhaps one-quarter of the population is HIV-positive — putting the condom-user at substantial risk for contracting HIV.

This is the best-case scenario, where condom use is rigorous — and even then, the door is still left ajar to HIV infection. Even more likely is that those who do receive condoms through a public-health organization will not use them in every sexual encounter. And most people will not use them at all. In Africa, there remains a huge cultural obstacle to condoms that is not merely the result of ignorance and lack of condom availability.

HIV in the West was transmitted mostly through casual sexual encounters in discrete populations. The anonymity of the one-night stand and the visibility of one’s cohort dying off so quickly encouraged the quick uptake of condoms in the 1990s. In Africa, on the other hand, the disease is spread wide through society — the target population for any public-health campaign is much larger — and many medically risky African relationships are long-term. Condom use in these seemingly “trusting” relationships is very low and, in any case, would rob them of one of their primary purposes: to produce children, the risk of HIV infection notwithstanding. One can preach condoms in an African society, but many of these polyamorous relationships will be unreceptive to their usage.

One can advocate the science of condoms right up until the point where it becomes a cultural disagreement, between the public-health lobby and Africans themselves, over the intrinsic value of sexual intercourse. That is the level that the debate has now reached. Decades of witnessing AIDS stalk the land have not naturally convinced Africans in dramatic numbers to use devices that are understood to be “life-saving.” Can we expect them to be convinced by the harangues, the budgetary largesse, and the snazzy ad campaigns of the West? I think not.

In its obsession with condoms, the Western public-health community has been every bit as dogmatic as the pope. And it has been even more blinkered to the realities of Africa, which is arguably in the grips of a huge religious and moral revival that has a huge potential to be wielded in the fight against AIDS. Church attendance is soaring, and Africans are willing to make sacrifices, of both their money and their pleasure, for moral causes. In this respect, it is not Benedict and the Catholic Church who are out of touch. It is the West and its condom myopia.

Travis Kavulla is a journalism fellow of the Phillips Foundation and was last year a Gates Scholar in African history at Cambridge. He writes from Kenya.  Reprinted by permission: www.nationalreview.com

 

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After nearly two months, Nadya Suleman has not left the spotlight. Suleman, now mother of 14, gave birth to octuplets, all of whom were conceived and cryogenically frozen as embryos during previous cycles of in vitro fertilization. As is typical of the media’s coverage of biomedical ethics, most of the discussion surrounding Suleman has been warped and misleading, and the issues that really matter haven’t been discussed at all.

First, we should be clear about what it is that made this case so controversial. It’s not that Suleman’s an unemployed single woman who became pregnant; this is too common to make headlines. It’s not that she used IVF as a path to motherhood, or that 14 human lives were created through her IVF procedures; it is routine practice in IVF for many more embryos to be created than are intended for implantation.

What makes Nadya Suleman unusual is that she chose to have all of her conceived offspring implanted and to bring them to term, even though she is single and unemployed. Tragically, it is this choice that has subjected her to national scrutiny, and has produced a parade of doctors and supposed experts eager to decry Suleman and her doctors as unethical, irresponsible, and even mentally unstable. To her credit, Suleman has repeatedly countered that the embryos already existed, that they are her children, and that she preferred to take the risks than to discard them or abort them as fetuses — measures which she was advised to take by her doctors.

As someone who is invested in reviving a culture of life in America, I find it deeply disturbing that we’ve come to a place where a woman is publicly ridiculed and condemned for not aborting her children — not only by angry strangers concerned with their taxes, but by people of influence who are supposed to represent medicine and ethics. To an industry that views children as products and embryos as mere biological material, choosing to risk your health to bear eight children seems crazy. “She’s already got six children,” they think. “Isn’t she satisfied?”

What hasn’t been mentioned is that most women who undergo IVF treatments are, at heart, more like Suleman than her critics. Last December, the Washington Post reported on a research study published in Fertility and Sterility which found that most women were uncomfortable with all their options for unimplanted embryos, with the exception of implanting them in the future or possibly thawing and discarding them in conjunction with a ceremony. This is telling because it seems to reveal that most people who use IVF, in hopes of having the opportunity to create life, end up recognizing that the embryos left behind are also human lives that deserve to be treated with care and dignity.

The difficulty faced by women, and by the clinics which have to store over 400,000 frozen embryos, has led some to timidly suggest that instead of focusing on the number of embryos implanted, fertility clinics ought to limit the number of embryos they create. Some have come to see this as a solution to IVF’s ethical problems, but as Catholic Christians, we can and should dig deeper.

What makes IVF unethical is not just that embryos are often destroyed or abandoned, or that precious children are often judged and rejected based on genetic criteria, or that it often leads to selective abortion or other offenses against human life. These are all merely symptoms of an errant philosophy.

The real trouble is that IVF has been marketed and accepted as a medical treatment for infertility; in reality, instead of enhancing fertility, it circumvents sex altogether — making procreation not the fruit of self-giving love, but a product of science subject to the pressures of a market economy. IVF is in some ways the culmination of the modern project to overcome the limits imposed on us by God’s design for sexuality, and to take the power of life into our own hands. As is always the case, the most vulnerable human beings end up casualties.

As a Catholic people, keenly aware of the precious beauty of human life, we need to reject the idea — so embedded in our cultural consciousness — that life is something to be crafted and controlled, instead of the gratuitous gift of God.

Most importantly for us, this means having the compassion and courage to affirm the worth and dignity of human life, in all its forms, at all times and in all circumstances — in married families, single parent families, orphanages, wombs, or test tubes.

It means seeing all 15 members of the Suleman family as God sees them — not as liabilities or mistakes, but as gifts to be accepted with open arms.

Amber McGuigan is a member of St. Agnes Parish, Blackwood.

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South Jersey will be joining 122 cities in 42 states across our nation for 40 days of intense prayer, fasting and standing vigil outside of abortion clinics during Lent, Feb. 25 to April 5.

A nationwide ecumenical campaign called “40 Days for Life” aims to end abortion through prayer, fasting, outreach and vigils. The first local campaign took place in 2004 in College Station, Texas. In 2007 the effort went nationwide, with campaigns in 89 cities in 33 states.

During a 40 Days for Life campaign, members of the community pray outside a local abortion clinic for a total of 40 days. Participants rotate in shifts, and no one is ever alone.

National organizers provide participants with a daily devotional, which includes a Scripture reading, reflection and prayer.

As an illustration of the campaign's success, organizers point to women who stated they had decided against having an abortion after seeing those praying during a clinic vigil.

We can and will close the abortion clinics in South Jersey, but we need every pro-life person in South Jersey to help us. 

There are many ways you can help. First and foremost, we need you to storm heaven with your prayers and fasting for 40 days straight. You can fast from coffee, sweets, television or even abstain from a hurtful word or action. Or you can do something positive for God, your neighbor or family member and offer it up for the success of the 40 Days for Life, the end of abortion and the conversion of all those involved in abortion in South Jersey. 

Second, please join us in a 54 Day Rosary Novena from Feb. 25 to April 19, ending on the eve of Divine Mercy Sunday. Please let us know you will be participating. 

Third, we will pray peacefully on the sidewalk outside the abortion clinic on 502 Kings Highway N, Cherry Hill for 40 days straight from 6:30 a.m.–6:30 p.m. We need all the hours filled, at least two people signing up per hour so no woman comes to the abortion clinic to have an abortion without someone there to offer prayer support and abortion alternatives.  We have flyers to give the women with abortion alternatives. Please sign up an hour a week or whatever time you can.  It is important to let us know when you are coming so we can fill all hours and provide a companion to new volunteers. 

We must be the Good Samaritans to the parents facing crisis pregnancies and to the unborn babies in danger of abortion. There are many other ways you can help us also, including giving out flyers, getting it in your bulletin, talking to your pro-life committee at your church, or giving a donation. If you have been hurt by an abortion in your life, we need your help to let these women going into the clinic know that abortion will not solve their problems. You can find healing through saving babies and helping women. 

Here is the testimony of a woman who volunteered in a previous 40 Days for Life: 

When asked by a dear friend to participate in The Forty Days for Life I hesitated, having had two abortions myself. I thought it would open my wounds that were still very painful. Finally agreeing I went knowing I would deeply regret it. I saw a poor girl sitting on the curb crying from her abortion experience, we called her over, as I looked into her eyes I saw her pain and it was my own. Yes, my wound was opened wider than ever and what poured out of it was not the usual isolated deep pain, but empathy and compassion for this poor girl, and for myself. On that very day I learned to love myself again because I took the horrible experience of my own abortions and used it to help someone else. What joy and peace to finally give back to God! I was able to look into her eyes and tell her that I understood, and she told me that that was what she needed to hear. Praise God, He used me as his instrument. 

To participate in 40 Days for Life contact Jennifer at 856-829-3009 or visit www.abortionclinicvigil.com 

Jennifer Racancoj is a member of St. Peter Parish, Merchantville.

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’Here am I, Lord; I come to do your will … I announced your justice in the vast assembly;

I did not restrain my lips, as you, O Lord, know.”

Psalm 40:9-10. 

How pertinent are these words of the responsorial psalm for Jan. 22, the day thousands of individuals descend upon our nation’s capital to speak out for justice for our unborn sisters and brothers.

This year, our participation in the March for Life is all the more important because the pro-life policies put into place this past decade are slated for dismantling by executive order or legislation.

One of Congress’ top priorities this session is to fund government agencies. Some of these bills which will be considered in late January or February already propose to reverse existing pro-life provisions such as the ban on funding abortions through the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program. In March, Congress will begin drafting the new appropriations bills for Fiscal Year 2010, and all pro-life protections in these bills will be subject to reversal by simply not including them.

Planned Parenthood along with over 60 other pro-abortion groups have already submitted to the Obama-Biden transition team plans for “Advancing Reproductive Rights and Health in a New Administration.” Whether these plans are accepted and implemented in a piecemeal fashion or through the Freedom of Choice Act, (FOCA) we do not know at this time. However it may be done, the following are some of its ramifications: 

• All hospitals, including Catholic hospitals, will be required to perform abortions upon request. If this happens, some bishops have already declared their intention to close down the Catholic hospitals in their dioceses.

• Partial-birth abortions will be legal and have no limitations.

• All U.S. taxpayers will be funding abortions.

• Parental notification of abortions on minors will no longer be required regardless of age. 

As you can see, we face significant threats to human life and our ability to act according to our consciences. The March for Life is one way we announce God’s justice for the weakest and most vulnerable among us: the unborn child in the womb.

In this issue of the Catholic Star Herald, you will find the locations of buses that will provide transportation to the March. These buses were paid for by the various local councils of the Knights of Columbus. They have been in the forefront of our church’s effort to save the lives of unborn children. On behalf of all of us in the Diocese of Camden, I thank you for all you do in the defense of human life.

Please do all that you can to participate in this year’s March for Life. If it is not possible for you to do so, please consider participating in a special nine-day rosary novena beginning Jan. 11 asking God to prevent FOCA or any portion of it from becoming law.

Let us keep in our hearts and minds the words of Psalm 40:11, “Your justice I kept not hid within my heart; your faithfulness and your salvation I have spoken of: I have made no secret of your kindness and your truth in the vast assembly.” 

Steven Bozza is director, Office of Family Life/Respect Life, for the Diocese of Camden.

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Early in his pontificate, Pope John Paul II asked the church to make a special effort to reach out to those who suffer from the wounds of abortion. In response, Project Rachel was founded, taking the name, “Rachel” from the book of Jeremiah, “Thus says the Lord; in Ramah is heard the sound of moaning, of bitter weeping! Rachel mourns her children; she refuses to be consoled because her children are no more.”

 The Rachel ministry began training ministers and counselors to tend the spiritual and psychological anguish of post-abortive women. Individual counseling and support groups emerged to provide the opportunity for women to openly acknowledge the pain and heartache associated with their great loss. Out of this effort, a weekend retreat was developed to assist the grieving process providing individuals the opportunity to retreat to a warm and nonjudgmental place where they could begin the tender work of healing. This model became known as Rachel’s Vineyard.

Currently operating around the world, from Ireland to Australia, from Russia to South America, “Rachel’s Vineyard” is dedicated to helping women and men experience the healing power of God’s love through faith-sharing, discussion and spiritual exercises to focus on dealing with the after-effects of abortion.

The weekend is an opportunity for the person to mend broken relationships, develop a spiritual relationship with their children, and to be reconciled. The retreat is based on our belief that those aborted still are with us, and so mother and unborn child can reconcile with each other and with God. Pope John Paul II firmly states, “You will come to understand that nothing is definitively lost and you will also be able to ask forgiveness from your child, who is now living in the Lord” (Paragraph 99, Evangelium Vitea).

A recent participant wrote, “For 30 years I carried the pain, anguish, and guilt of the decisions I made early in my life. Although I have been active in the church for over 14 years, and I knew God had forgiven me, I never could forgive myself and always felt unworthy of God’s love and of anything good that would happen to me. … I have known about this ministry for several years and was afraid to come forward and attend a retreat weekend. Once I made the retreat, I quickly came to realize that it was the best thing that happened to me.  I feel totally liberated, loved by God and able to truly forgive myself. The best thing is that I am able to connect with the children I thought forever lost, ask their forgiveness and acknowledge and accept them as part of God’s family.”

While the Diocese of Camden has offered RV retreats on a regular basis for the last 10 years, it is about to increase its services as we prepare to offer the first ever Spanish language retreat next month: Dec. 5-7 at the Pope John Paul II Retreat Center, Vineland. This being the first Spanish-speaking Rachel’s Vineyard retreat in the state of New Jersey, we are excited to be able to offer this retreat in Spanish, for there is comfort in being able to talk and grieve in your own language.

The weekend will be led by facilitators fluent in Spanish. Women who have gone to past Rachel’s Vineyard retreats and have received healing and God’s compassion, forgiveness and mercy will be available to share their experiences and serve as an example for retreat-goers. For, “Thus says the Lord; cease your cries of mourning, wipe the tears from your eyes. The sorrow you have shown shall have its reward, says the Lord.... There is hope for your future!” (Jer. 31:16-17).

The retreat begins at 5:30 p.m. Friday evening, Dec. 5, and concludes with a memorial service and closing mass on Sunday afternoon, Dec. 7. Cost is $150 for room and board, and retreat materials; however, no one is turned away because of financial constraints. Space is limited, with registration completed on a first come first served basis.

For more information, contact toll free 877-665-2974, or e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it All calls are strictly confidential. 

Stephanie Claudy is Project Rachel coordinator for the Diocese of Camden.

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