The general assembly of Caritas
Internationalis in late May is shaping up as a defining moment for the
confederation of 165 national Catholic charities, at a time when the
Vatican is insisting on greater control over Caritas operations.
The agenda of the May 22-27 meeting reflects the Vatican's moves toward
closer collaboration and supervision: On the assembly's first full
working day, four Vatican officials will speak on the crucial topics of
Catholic identity and the juridical status of Caritas Internationalis in
the universal church.
Then new statutes for the organization, prepared by a working team of
the Holy See and Caritas Internationalis, will be reviewed -- statutes
that, according to Caritas officials, would require them to consult with
the Holy See before making certain decisions and would acknowledge the
Holy See's authority over Caritas' financial and personnel issues.
The changes have not come without tension, but Vatican sources said that
in recent talks with top officials of Caritas Internationalis the
atmosphere has vastly improved, and that there's been "a great level of
cooperation." They emphasized that the Vatican remains very supportive
of Caritas and appreciates the key role it plays in promoting the
church's social teaching and helping those in need.
The Vatican's move toward participation in the governance structures of
Caritas Internationalis, the church's worldwide aid and development
organization, is motivated in part by the organization's high public
profile.
"Caritas Internationalis, as a public entity of the church, is
authorized to speak and act for the church in the international forum.
Because of that right and duty, it needs to speak the church's language
and make sure that its activities and its agreements with non-Catholic
agencies reflect what the church teaches," said one Vatican official.
The Vatican, recognizing that Caritas Internationalis is a confederation
of local independent charities that depend on local bishops, also wants
the bishops more directly involved in oversight and collaboration.
Independent of its ongoing dialogue with Caritas Internationalis, the
Vatican is giving closer attention to the church's charitable activities
in general.
Catholic News Service
has learned that the Vatican is currently studying a draft document on
the role and responsibility of bishops regarding the church's charitable
organizations. The draft document has been prepared by the Pontifical
Council Cor Unum and is being reviewed by the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith and other Vatican agencies.
Changes are expected to the text and its publication is not imminent, in
part because it touches on complicated issues, sources said. But the
project is an indication of the Vatican's increased interest in
promoting a clearer Catholic identity in the church's charitable
activities at every level.
The Vatican's concern is also reflected in its own relationship with
international agencies. Sources said, for example, that in recent months
the Vatican has, at least temporarily, suspended contributions to
certain U.N. agencies dealing with refugees, indigenous peoples and
disarmament.
The Vatican's contributions in the past were not large but were seen as
symbolic gestures of support. The new policy apparently is a consequence
of Vatican disquiet over long-standing disagreements with the United
Nations on issues such as abortion, population control and the family.
The debate over Caritas Internationalis became public in February when
news emerged that Vatican officials had prevented the organization's
secretary-general, Lesley-Anne Knight, from seeking a second four-year
term. The Vatican withheld the approval, or "nihil obstat" ("nothing
stands in the way"), when she submitted her name as a candidate to
continue in the position.
Caritas officials, citing Knight's accomplishments, expressed deep
regret at the Vatican's decision and asked the Vatican secretary of
state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, to reconsider -- but to no avail. The
move was seen as a sign that the Secretariat of State was assuming a
much more direct role in Caritas operations than in the past.
Vatican sources did not dispute that but took issue with the suggestion
that Knight's departure was an injustice. They said Knight was a manager
with a four-year contract, and the Vatican's commitment to her ends
with the expiration of her contract in May.
In recent weeks, as Caritas and Vatican officials met to prepare for the
general assembly, there's been an effort to move past that issue and
back off the rhetoric. As a result, one source said, there has been a
great deal of progress toward finding common ground.
Three candidates to replace Knight as secretary-general have been given
the "nihil obstat" by the Vatican and will stand for election by the
confederation members, sources said. They are:
-- Paolo Beccegato, head of the international unit of Caritas Italy.
-- Michel Roy, director of advocacy for Caritas France.
-- Karel Zelenka, the Catholic Relief Services country representative
for South Africa. CRS is the U.S. bishops' aid and development agency.
Whoever is elected will have to deal with establishing a new
relationship with Vatican officials, one that involves better dialogue
and cooperation with the Holy See, as Vatican experts put it. In their
view, Caritas Internationalis needs to understand that as a "public
juridical entity" of the church -- a status assigned Caritas in 2004 --
it functions under the administration of the Vatican.
Just what that status entails has been the subject of talks between
Caritas Internationalis and the Secretariat of State and their
respective canon law experts. A year ago, Caritas submitted to the
Vatican a new set of statutes, and the two parties began talks on
revising and adapting the canonical rules that apply to such entities.
They are still discussing the details, but Caritas officials say it's
clear that the final word belongs to the Holy See.
Vatican officials underlined that the increased Vatican supervision
foreseen by the new statutes corresponds to canon law provisions that
regulate the church's public juridical entities, including the
administration of their temporal goods.
In some ways, the legal and structural questions boil down to different
points of emphasis. As one Vatican official remarked, "Caritas
Internationalis is not a type of international democracy." Local Caritas
organizations depend on local dioceses, he said, and the "true
stakeholders" of Caritas are the bishops and the pope.
Caritas officials acknowledge that but say the structure of Caritas has never been top-down.
"This is a confederation, and the principles of autonomy and subsidiarity need to be at work," said one source.
Vatican officials said the new statutes will respect those principles,
and that this point will be explained and clarified at the general
assembly.
In recent years, the Vatican has been particularly concerned about some
of the cooperative ventures and working agreements Caritas
Internationalis has made with U.N. and other international agencies, not
all of which share the church's moral perspectives.
For example, in 2009 Caritas Internationalis and the U.S. Embassy to the
Vatican co-sponsored a Rome conference on church-state partnerships to
fight HIV and AIDS. Among the speakers was Michel Sidibe, executive
director of UNAIDS, the United Nations' agency that coordinates the
global response to HIV/AIDS.
Caritas Internationalis has argued that while the church may have some
differences with the United Nations and other organizations on their
approach to AIDS, it's important to keep cooperative channels open and
make sure the church has "a seat at the table" when international AIDS
policies are discussed.
Vatican officials have also faulted some Caritas Internationalis policy
documents and publications. A 2006 document on gender strategies, in
their view, adopted the loaded or ambiguous terminology of "gender
politics" instead of expressing church teaching. Caritas officials, who
agreed with some of the objections, said the offending document was
quickly removed from circulation.
A related concern is that Caritas policy documents, while competently
done, are sometimes mistakenly seen as official pronouncements of church
teaching. Caritas Internationalis should promote its policy positions
on economic or political matters in a way that is "not dogmatic," one
Vatican official said.
Caritas officials said, however, that the organization has been careful
to consult with the Vatican on such issues. They said the only policy
document published over the past four years was one on climate justice,
which was submitted to the Secretariat of State for review more than a
year before its publication.
The new draft of the statutes addresses this issue, establishing a
formal mechanism of consultation between Caritas Internationalis and the
Vatican on advocacy documents and position papers.
On the much-discussed issue of "Catholic identity," the Vatican said it
was not asking Caritas to "proselytize" in carrying out its charity work
worldwide, but rather to always use language that reflects the church's
teaching about the human person. Caritas officials agreed but said this
was already being done, pointing to the 2010 document on climate
justice as an example.
The identity issue is also related to the way Caritas understands its
place in the universal church -- the "theological dimension" that
Vatican officials say has been somewhat neglected in the past, but which
will take center stage at the start of the upcoming general assembly.