A professional relationship already exists, writes Immaculate Heart
of Mary Sr. Ann Oestreich, congregation justice coordinator for the
Sisters of the Holy Cross, between shareholders and corporate
executives, but a personal relationship develops and grows between equal
parties in a dialogue.
According to Oestreich in the liturgical bulletin of the Church of
Our Lady of Loretto at St. Mary's College in South Bend, Ind., in 2012,
the Congregation of the Holy Cross engaged in four corporate dialogues.
Two dialogues were with oil and gas companies -- Chevron and Halliburton
-- on reviewing and implementing human rights policies across their
global operations.
Both companies are working with religious shareholders to update
their human rights policies referring to the statute set forth in the
United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
They are also adding human rights language to future supplier
contracts to ensure negotiations for just wages and a repudiation of
labor trafficking practices. Shareholders and corporate representatives
have quarterly conference calls to ensure that progress on these issues
is being made.
As a result of the work against sex trafficking at the 2012 Super
Bowl in Indianapolis, the congregation purchased stock in Choice Hotels
International and joined a dialogue with its corporate executives.
Shareholders urged Choice to sign the industry's The Tourism
Child-Protection Code of Conduct and to train its employees to recognize
and safely report any suspected incidences of trafficking they observe.
Finally, the Congregation of Holy Cross joined other religious
communities in dialogue with The Hershey Company regarding child labor
trafficking in the cocoa fields of West Africa, especially Ivory Coast
and Ghana.
Shareholders have been urging Hershey and other chocolatiers to
recognize the kidnapping of children and the abusive working and health
conditions workers endure while harvesting cocoa pods used to produce
chocolates sold around the world.
Hershey is a United States-based chocolate company that imports 70
percent of its cocoa from West Africa and holds 43 percent of the U.S.
chocolate market.
In a surprise move on Oct. 3, Hershey agreed to certify 100 percent
of its chocolate by 2020. Shareholders are praising this move by Hershey
and will work with the company to determine a consistent certification
process in the next five to seven years.
The Holy Cross nuns are obviously in good hands with Oestreich acting
as justice coordinator for the congregation. The church, too, is in
good hands with sisters like Oestreich doing this important ministry.
If only the Vatican and conservative U.S. bishops, whether working in
the Vatican or not, understood what American nuns understand: Abortion
and same-sex marriage aren't the only social justice issues that should
concern us.
You can see how much good qualified nuns like Oestreich can
accomplish by engaging in this difficult ministry. The Vatican and
conservative U.S. bishops should simply say "thank you" and then get out
of the way and let the nuns do their work on behalf of the Kingdom of
God.
Unfortunately, this has not been the case in recent years. First,
there was the "visitation" of religious communities of women, causing
many of them to put their ministries aside to prepare the paperwork
required by the Vatican.
Then there was the harassment of the Leadership Conference of Women
Religious by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, as if their
orthodoxy were in question.
The Vatican, responding to complaints from various right-wing voices
in the U.S. hierarchy, religious and laity, was unimpressed with
American nuns' commitment to the poor and to various justice issues,
like the concerns described above. The doctrinal congregation felt there
should be greater emphasis on abortion and same-sex marriage and not a
trace of advocacy for the ordination of women.
The U.S. bishops lost even more of their own magisterial credibility
with the re-election of Barack Obama as president of the United States.
After so many of them expressed opposition to Obama's candidacy, at
least half of the Catholics, and probably more, paid no attention to
them when they voted. However, in large numbers, Catholics continue to
support and appreciate the ministry of the nuns.
2012 was truly the year of the nuns.