GERMAN women should be encouraged to "stay at home
and bring three or four children into the world", rather than relying on
immigration to solve the country's demographic crisis, the Catholic
Archbishop of Cologne has said.
Cardinal Joachim Meisner compared Angela Merkel's government's family policies to Communist East Germany, where, he said, women who stayed at home were considered "demented".
Germany,
which has the lowest birth rate in Europe, is seeking more workers from
crisis-hit countries, including Spain, to solve its shortage of skilled
labour.
In an unusually direct criticism of the chancellor,
Cardinal Meisner said: "Where are women really publicly encouraged to
stay at home and bring three or four children into the world? This is
what we should do, and not – as Mrs Merkel does now – simply present
immigration as the solution to our demographic problem."
In an
interview with the 'Stuttgarter Zeitung', the cardinal said that Germany
should not take away the "youth and future" of Spain and Portugal.
Germany
has agreed to provide jobs or apprenticeship places for 5,000
unemployed young people from Spain each year, under a deal signed by the
two countries' labour ministers in Madrid this week, part of joint
European efforts to address rising youth unemployment.
Cardinal
Meisner said: "We should train these unemployed people . . . but then
allow them to go back to their homeland, where they are needed."
Germany has Europe's lowest birth rate, at 1.36 children per woman, according to the federal statistical agency.
In
2006, Ms Merkel introduced generous child benefit payments, worth up to
65pc of a new parent's salary, to a maximum of €1,800 a month. But the
policy has had little effect on the birth rate, which continues to
dwindle.
Most German schools end at lunchtime, making it difficult
for parents to work full-time, although a growing number are beginning
to stay open in the afternoon.
Annegret Laakmann, the president of
the Catholic group Women's Dignity, dismissed the 79-year-old
archbishop's views. "Age doesn't always bring wisdom," she said.
"The
church can't drag women back into the kitchen. We don't live in the
1940s – women are more educated and have greater opportunity for
leadership now."
CONTROVERSY
Cardinal
Meisner also commented on the controversy in January when two Catholic
hospitals denied treatment to a rape victim, apparently because they did
not want to give advice on dealing with an unwanted pregnancy.
However,
he said that while rape was a serious crime, the church had to warn
women against birth control methods that were not compatible with
Catholic beliefs.