Posted by ZENIT Staff on 9 May, 2016

Pope Francis says that health “is not a consumer good, but rather a universal right, and therefore access to healthcare services cannot be a privilege.”
The Pope said this Saturday morning when he received in audience 9,000 members of the organisation “Doctors with Africa” (CUAMM – Collegio Universitario Aspiranti e Medici Missionari) who work to protect the of health of African populations and to draw up and implement wide-ranging development projects.
CUAMM is the acronym for the original Italian name of the organization which was the first NGO in the field of healthcare to be officially recognized in Italy: University College for Aspiring Missionary Doctors, founded in 1950 in the Diocese of Padua by Dr. Francesco Canova, a missionary physician in Jordan, and Bishop Girolamo Bortignon.
Under the leadership of Don Luigi Mazzucato, who headed the organization for more than 50 years, CUAMM gained its current position as the leading Italian organization engaged in Sub-Saharan Africa, operating in 7 African countries (Angola, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda) where it delivers medical aid and expertise with its international and local teams.
“Healthcare, especially at the most basic level, is indeed denied in many parts of the world and many regions of Africa,” the Pontiff lamented. “It is not a right for all, but rather it is still a privilege reserved to the few, to those who can afford it. Access to healthcare services, treatment and medicines remains a mirage. The poorest are unable to pay and are excluded from hospital services, even the most essential primary care. Your generous activity in support of a capillary network of services, able to answer the needs of the populations, is therefore important.”
The countries where CUAMM is active are “the geographical peripheries in which the Lord sends you to be good Samaritans, to reach out to the poor Lazarus, through the door that leads from the first to the third world. This is your ‘holy door’!” exclaimed Francis, noting that CUAMM works with the most vulnerable sectors of the population, including mothers, ensuring safe and dignified childbirth, and newborns, as in Africa many women continue to die in childbirth, and many children do not survive beyond the first month of life as a result of malnutrition and epidemics. “You are able to be an expression of the mother Church, who stoops to be the weakest and cares for them.”
He went on to indicate that authentic and lasting development processes must have a long-term outlook, “with the logic of sowing trustfully and patiently awaiting fruit,” as Africa “is in need of patient and constant, tenacious and competent accompaniment,” and interventions require “serious work planning, research and innovation, and impose the duty of transparency towards donors and in relation to public opinion.”
“You are doctors ‘with’ Africa and not ‘for’ Africa,” Francis stated. “You are called to involve the African people in the process of growth, walking with them, sharing difficulties and joys, suffering and enthusiasm. The people are the architects of their own development, the first to take responsibility. I know that you face daily challenges with gratuitousness and disinterested help, without proselytism or occupation of spaces. Rather, you do so by collaborating with the Churches and local governments, according to the logic of participation and sharing of commitments and mutual responsibilities. I urge you to maintain your special approach to local realities, helping them to grow and leaving them once they are able to continue by themselves, from the perspective of development and sustainability. It is the logic of the seed, that disappears and dies to bring lasting fruit.”
Finally, he emphasised that following the teachings of its founders, witnesses of a evangelically fruitful missionary approach based on closeness, CUAMM carries out its work with courage, as the expression of a Church that is not a “super clinic for VIPs” but rather a “field hospital.” A Church with a great heart, close to the many wounded and humiliated of history, in the service of the poorest.”
“Pope Francis says that health “is not a consumer good, but rather a universal right, and therefore access to healthcare services cannot be a privilege.” “
Well, that’s certainly one way of looking at it.
Another way is that health care, like The Law – or the Ritz Hotel – is open to anyone who can afford it.
…In other words, If you intend to be ill, it’s a sound idea to make sure you are rich first.
That’s how it’s always worked. And now it always will. “The poor (and sick) are with us always.” …someone once remarked.
So it must be all right. And that will never change.
[The Moderator – Are you channelling Donald Trump, Toad? I had you down as a Sanders man. You know that the Holy Father is saying that we have a duty to resist the gravitational pull of the market to help the poor, he isn’t attempting a linguistic ploy.]
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Is there anything left that is not a right?
In other news: Revenge of The Deaconess Phoebe:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/pope-francis-says-hes-willing-to-study-female-deacons/article29989126/
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It’s depressing stuff, JH, and part of the reason that I comment so rarely these days. There are a few bright-sides to this though:
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Toad is an old-fashioned Socialist Mr(s) Moderator. Nuff sed.
Though, I once asked a bishop if – by saying “The poor are always with us, ” Christ wasn’t giving the Trumps of the planet carte blanche?*
it’s the selfishness of mankind that makes Socialism a pipe dream. But I have a fondness for pipe dreams. And lost causes. Perhaps that’s why I’m so devoted to CP&S.
*(The bishop said he’d never thought of it in that way, before.)
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