|
Report on Encuentro Internacional “Vida y Familia”in
Cochabamba, Bolivia
Adolfo J. Castañeda, Vida Humana Internacional
May 23-25, 2003
The God of Life was certainly planning great things for Bolivia,
for I had never before encountered so many obstacles when preparing
for a conference overseas. For starters, I lost my passport two
months before leaving. Thanks to God I was able to get a new one
in time for my departure. Then, my computer got a virus just the
day before taking the plane, when I was making final preparations
with the educational materials I was to take with me. Thanks be
to God, again I was able to resolve that problem. Finally, the
flight I was supposed to get on was canceled without notice! I
did finally get on a plain to Bolivia the next day, May the 24th.
Bolivia, a
country the size of Texas and California combined, is in the heart
of South America. It has no outlet to any ocean, but plenty of
rivers with delicious fish. This land of about 8 million people
(mostly Catholic) and a very low population density of less than
10 persons per square mile, is also blessed with natural gas,
gold, silver and a great variety of vegetables, including more
than 20 different types of potatoes. Unfortunately, years of governmental
corruption, cocaine trafficking and leftist agitation have impoverished
this beautiful country. Nevertheless, Bolivia does have very capable
people, including professionals, experts in technology and scientists,
who can turn it around.
I arrived
at Cochabamba, the third largest city, early in the morning, after
flying all night. I was immediately taken to the First International
Conference “Life and Family” by Mrs. Nora Rojas, the
wife of Mr. Mario Rojas, the Executive Director of ANE Provida,
our affiliate in Bolivia. ANE stands for “Apostolado de
la Nueva Evangelización” (“New Evangelization
Apostolate”) – a Catholic evangelization movement
that started at Cochabamba, but that has gone international. It
has the blessing of the local bishop and is very faithful to the
Magisterium. It emphasizes the Eucharist and devotion to Our Blessed
Mother (you can’t go wrong with that!). Needless to say,
all pro-lifers were worried about my delay and praying their hearts
out for my successful arrival.
The Conference
was a huge success. About 600 professionals attended, most of
them were young educators – that was the emphasis of the
event. Its international character was due to the fact that 4
out of the 6 speakers were from outside the country, myself included.
Dr. Concepción Morales, from Pro-Vida Cuba (an organization
which belongs to the Catholic Church in that country), spoke to
an attentive crowd about the consequences of abortion and contraception,
and also about the benefits of NFP, of which she is an expert.
Another expert of NFP, Dr. Blanca Neira, a leader of CEPROFARENA,
our affiliate in Peru, also spoke about this issue. Carlos Beltramo,
also form Peru and a leader of ALAFA (a pro-family organization
active in Latin America), addressed attendants on the topics of
chastity and the importance of the family in building the Culture
of Life.
The two national
speakers were Fr. Miguel Manzanera, SJ, an expert in bioethics
and the President of ANE Provida, who spoke on the status of the
human embryo and on respect for the dying; and Dr. Silvestre Arze,
another expert in bioethics, who gave a talk on the correct approach
to organ transplants. He based his definition of death on the
Holy Father’s careful approach to this delicate issue.
I gave three
conferences. The first was on the immorality of human cloning
and its ethical alternatives (a hot topic at this moment in Bolivia).
The second one was on the true meaning of human sexuality –
here I discussed chastity, marriage and celibacy, as well as the
evils of contraception, fornication and homosexual activity, among
others. I emphasized why these things are wrong and I also explained
the beauty of Church teaching about the wonderful gift of human
sexuality. My final talk was on the work Vida Humana Internacional
does in the Hispanic world – for which I used a Power Point
Presentation. I also brought with me 70 pounds of educational
materials, which will be greatly used by the local pro-lifers.
The Conference
ended with a beautiful Mass (without liturgical abuses). It was
presided by His Excellency Archbishop Ivo Scapolo, Apostolic Nuncio
to Bolivia, who came down from La Paz (the capital) to be present
for the entire event. Concelebrating were His Excellency Tito
Solari, Archbishop of Cochabamba; His Excellency René Fernández,
Retired Archbishop of Cochabamba; His Excellency Luis Sainz, Auxiliary
Archbishop of Cochabamba; His Excellency Abel Costas, Retired
Bishop of Tarija; Fr. Manzanera; Fr. Víctor Benavente,
Rector of San Luis Seminary; Fr. Franco Gasparini and Fr. O’Brien,
a Maryknoll missionary, who has worked for many years in La Paz.
There were also several seminarians from San Luis Seminary.
That evening,
I personally gave to Mons. Scapolo and to Mons. Solari copies
of two manuals we have prepared for the bishops in the Hispanic
world. One of them is about how to help persons with homosexual
inclinations live a chaste life. The other one is about post-abortion
healing and reconciliation.
The Conference
also received a lot of press coverage in the local newspapers.
One of them, Los Tiempos (“The Times”) sent a reporter
to interview the speakers. I was interviewed on human cloning.
During my last day in Bolivia, May the 26th I was again interviewed,
this time more extensively, by the same newspaper on the same
topic.
The next day
of the Conference, Sunday May the 25th, we held training sessions.
Drs. Morales and Neira and I addressed over 30 leaders on pro-life
strategies and counter arguments to the anti-life lies and deceptive
language. I must point out that those present were people who
also attended the Conference and who were not only from Cochabamba,
but from other cities as well, including La Paz, Santa Cruz and
Tarija. Bolivia is by no means a small country, so the pro-lifers
traveled quite a bit to be present there. In four hours these
attentive people, most of them professionals, including doctors
and educators, were drilled on IPPF, the UN, the anti-life feminists
and their deceptive arguments, such as “reproductive health”,
“gender perspective” and “safe and legal abortion”,
among others.
Bolivia is
a special target of IPPF, which makes the ridiculous claim that
its birth rate is too high (thank God it’s about 4 children
per woman of child-bearing age in a practically empty country!)
They also claim that too many women are dying from clandestine
abortions. That’s the same argument pro-aborts made over
30 years ago in the U.S. to legalize abortion and make it “safe”
– not for the unborn child nor for his mother, of course,
but for the pockets of the abortion business. This “safe
and legal abortion” dangerous nonsense is the same garbage
that IPPF, the UN and their cohorts are pushing all over Latin
America. Can you help us stop them?
The next day,
Monday morning, May the 26th, I did not leave Bolivia on the flight
I was scheduled to. Yes, it did happen again! Although this time
I was “mysteriously” put out of that flight and into
the one leaving that evening. But it was providential. As you
know, God writes straight with crooked lines. That day I was invited
to speak, along with Dr. Morales, to the student body of a school
of nurse assistants. The school, which belongs to the government
of Bolivia and which is partially financed by the government of
Japan, is into the “reproductive health”, and the
pro-contraception sex “education” baloney. They had
a full colored brochure, sponsored by the pro-abortion Pathfinder
Fund, telling how “wonderful” pills, IUDs and condoms
are. Of course, it did not say a word about the abortifacient
effects or about the dangers to women’s health of the first
two, nor about the high failure rate in preventing AIDS of the
latter. When it came to NFP, it reduced it to the “calendar”
method.
Dr. Morales
had a field day shocking the students, most of whom were young
women, about the abortifacient nature of the Pill and the IUD,
as well as the deceptive “safety” of the condom. She
also chastised the brochure for being “over 70 years outdated”
and proceeded to debunk the myths about the modern methods of
NFP. In the afternoon she would continue to explain how NFP works
and its wonderful benefits for marriage.
I began my
talk by astounding the audience with the fact that nowadays Japan
is the country whose government gives more money to the international
anti-life movement --the very same government which is funding
their school! I then told them which organizations belong to the
death “culture”: IPPF (including its affiliate in
Bolivia: CIES), the UN, UNFPA, UNICEF, “Catholics for a
Free (or rather, Fatal) Choice”, the anti-life feminists,
etc., etc.
I told also
them that no loving husband would want his wife to be pumped with
more that 150 different chemical reactions into her body (that’s
the effect of the Pill), nor having a dangerous piece of plastic
perforate her uterus (that’s a possible effect of the IUD).
I then told them (by now they were dumbfounded) that a loving
husband, if serious reasons were present to space the birth of
children, would want to preserve the delicate and wonderful inner
ecology of his wife by means of NFP. I finally told them that
Bolivia’s greatest natural resource was not natural gas,
nor minerals, nor fruits, nor any of the rest; but Bolivians themselves,
especially Bolivian children. And that no foreign country or organization
should come to tell them how many children they ought to have
or kill – nor should their own government cooperate with
them.
Curiously
enough, at the end, nobody asked any questions or made any comments.
I wondered what happened between the students and the personnel
in charge of the school after I left at noon. For, from time to
time, some of the latter came to peek at our talks, which were
delivered almost always only to the students. I hope they didn’t
“crucify” Dr. Morales, who stayed there the rest of
the afternoon. Poor Dr. Morales, I think I left her with a “hot
potato”!
I left Bolivia
tired but happy. I think the pro-life cause is in very good hands
there. ANE Provida has leaders who are both capable and solidly
based on the spiritual life. They are faithful to the Magisterium
and supported by their local bishops. But they now face two big
challenges. The first one is the weak abortion law they have in
Bolivia. It does not protect life unconditionally, but allows
babies to be killed when they are conceived out of rape and when
their mothers have a health problem while carrying them in their
wombs. These two so-called “exceptions” are, of course,
at least potentially, abortion on demand. That’s especially
so if the term “health” is interpreted broadly, as
happened in the U.S. and as the pro-abortion, UN-dependent World
Health Organization has defined “health”.
The second
problem is the fact that in vitro fertilization (IVF) is not even
regulated at all. This, in a way, is schizophrenic. Because a
country that forbids, even though weakly, the killing of unborn
children, should also prohibit the killing of human embryos by
means of IVF. The danger is that, just as they did with abortion,
Bolivian legislators might prohibit IVF but with exceptions.
ANE Provida
needs all the help it can get from all of us. It needs to educate
its people about the humanity of the unborn child (including the
embryo), the inhumanity of abortion and IVF and the monstrosity
of a law that allows the killing of innocent human beings by means
of so-called “exceptions”.
I would like
to take this opportunity to congratulate and thank Fr. Manzanera,
Mr. Rojas, his wife Nora and the rest of the collaborators of
ANE Provida for the great pro-life work they do and for the wonderful
hospitality they showed me.
|