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Taking Religion Hostage
by James Hitchcock
April 6, 2002Many sincere people instinctively support the United Nations, for obvious reasons. The UN exists for the sake of peace, and its idealism should be endorsed, however much it fails of its goal. But increasingly the reality is not merely that the UN fails but but that it threatens liberties which Westerners take for granted, especially freedom of religion. (People who wish to follow these alarming developments can do so through the vigilance of a group called Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute.
The demand for "population control" naturally has a lot to do with this. But interestingly, some UN agencies now admit that their previous population estimates were far off and that the threat of "over-population" was exaggerated. In some countries, the birth rate is now below replacement level.
But, even if some in the UN now admit this, "reproductive rights" continue to remain large on the UN agenda, because in many ways that agenda is held hostage to the demands of radical feminism, people for whom access to abortion is the most fundamental of all human rights. They push this agenda at every opportunity and have succeeded in getting the UN to recognize this "right" on several occasions.
The UN Population Fund argues that existing UN statements on rights, even if they do not mention abortion, "if very broadly interpreted and skillfully argued -- can be very useful in efforts to expand access to safe abortions", and it has endorsed the Chinese population-control policy, which includes forced abortions.
Catholics for a Free Choice (a propaganda group with no members) has long been officially allowed to lobby UN delegations on various matters. Recently CFFC posted ads accusing the Church of "killing people" by its opposition to distributing condoms, and lodged a formal complaint urging the UN to censure the Holy See for its policies. The Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, accepted and officially circulated CFFC's statement. In 1999, CFFC demanded that the Vatican no longer be recognized as a country, for UN purposes, because the Holy See refuses to fall into line over "population control".
In a related matter, the European Parliament, which has been taking over more and more of the authority of national governments, has passed a resolution condemning "fundamentalist" religions as a danger to the peace of the world. The condemnation paints with a broad brush, scarcely bothering to define its terms and making no effort to insure that it will not inhibit religious freedom. The Catholic Church is implicitly condemned, because the criteria includes all groups which "fail to give full equality to women", a stricture obviously aimed at those which do not ordain women to the ranks of the clergy.
Richard Wilkins, a former official of the American government, warns that the new International Criminal Court could be used to bring criminal charges against religious leaders who are insufficiently "progressive" about abortion or sexual behavior, because the ICC defines "crime" in ways that can mean almost anything.
Behind specific issues lie certain proposals, endorsed by one or other UN agencies or officials, to pressure all religions to abandon their distinctive beliefs and become part of a great religious synthesis. In the process Christians would have to cease claiming that there is only one God and that Jesus is the only savior of the human race. The kind of people who push these agendas have shown almost no interest in the violations of religious liberty now occuring throughout the world.
Pro-lifers who wonder if they did the right thing in voting for President Bush can take comfort in the fact that the American delegation to the UN is firmly opposed to these maneuvers, even though it often finds itself isolated. Under the current American government the United States stands out as the leading opponent in the world of officially mandated abortion.If it seems alarmist to warn that religious liberty could be severely curtailed by international agencies, it should not be forgotten that ten years ago the ideas recorded here were scarcely visible in the public forum but now they are espoused by official agencies. If the history of the past forty years has taught anything, it is the remarkable speed with which the unthinkable not only becomes thinkable but is soon treated as undeniable.
James Hitchcock, professor of history at St. Louis University, writes and lectures on contemporary Church matters. His column appears in the diocesan press. His two-volume book on religion and the Supreme Court has just been published by Princeton University Press. E-Mail: Dr. James Hitchcock
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