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H.M.E.H. the Prince and Grand Master Fra' Andrew Bertie
Address of the Grand Master to
the Diplomatic Corps
Rome Magistral Villa, 09/01/2007
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Voormalig Prins en Vorst Grootmeester van de Maltezer Orde:
fra' Andrew Bertie |
Mr. Dean, Your Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Once again I take pleasure in receiving here on the Aventine Hill the members of
the Diplomatic Corps accredited to the Order for the traditional ceremony of
exchange of greetings.
Mr.Ambassador of Honduras, dear Dean, I am very grateful for the New Year
greetings you expressed to me on behalf of the Diplomatic Corps. I would also
like to thank you for your sentiments of appreciation, and for the benevolent
interest you have shown in the work of Sovereign Order of Malta. And I wish in
particular to welcome the ambassadors who are participating in this meeting for
the first time.
This annual meeting constitutes a special occasion for me and for the Order’s
government, since it offers me the opportunity of looking at the world together
with you.
A look at the world today
There have been many reasons for pain and apprehension during the year which has
just ended, and first of all I wish to express to His Excellency the Ambassador
of the Philippines our sentiments of friendship and our prayers for the
devastation caused by the Durian typhoon.
Numerous tragic events took place in 2006, with some continuing into this year:
- the tragic situation in Lebanon, Palestine and Iraq;
- the drama of Darfur, where we were forced to interrupt our vaccination
programme for safety reasons;
- the deaths of journalists and mass-media representatives in war zones;
- the traffic of human beings in Europe, where hundreds of thousands of men,
women and children end up every year in the hands of powerful criminal
organisations, specialised in drug trafficking, in prostitution and in the trade
of organs;
- the danger represented by the clash between cultures and religions,
considering that religions have become the great concern of our millennium;
- the fate of the five Belgian nurses and Palestinian doctor imprisoned for
seven years and now condemned to death, for whom we greatly hope in a reprieve;
- and unfortunately many others…..
Despite all this, there are still reasons to hope for a better future. There are
positive signs, such as His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI’s apostolic visit to
Turkey - certainly an extraordinary event which will remain in the history of
the Church and the history of humanity.
The Order of Malta in 2006
In this context of continual human dramas, the Order of Malta has steadily
carried out its mission in all the regions where its teams were already present
or where they have been requested to intervene.
In particular, during 2006 the Order has provided aid:
- In Africa, where our hospitals have assisted patients affected by AIDS,
tuberculosis, sleeping sickness and leprosy, treating and giving psychological
support to the women affected or raped, looking after refugees, distributing
water, medicines and vaccines.
- Particularly noteworthy is the activity of the Order’s teams in the
bidonvilles of Nairobi in Kenya, where around 10 per cent of the adults have
AIDS or tuberculosis: 600,000 people have been successfully treated. Thanks to a
cooperation agreement between the Order of Malta, the Austrian Government and
the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, funds
necessary for continuing this project until 2009 have been allocated.
- In India, a country much affected by AIDS, a programme similar to the one
developed in Kenya will be launched next year.
- In Sudan, in the province of Darfur, where the Order has been supporting five
health centres since 2005, enabling 115,000 people to be helped.
- In Asia, where the Order intervened in Java, following the earthquake which
took place last May.
- In Egypt, where we have launched a project for the medical treatment of
leprosy, in agreement with the Governor of Cairo.
- In Vietnam and in the Philippines, where our Emergency Corps has given aid to
the victims of the Xangsane typhoon which destroyed entire regions in October
last year.
- In southern Sri-Lanka, where the Order has launched a pilot health project.
- In the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where a new health
programme is underway to prevent an outbreak of the ‘black death’.
- In Romania, following the serious floods from the Danube in 2006, where the
Order has started to build eight wells for drinking water for the inhabitants of
eight centres in the Tulcea district.
- In Pakistan, where we have continued our activities to help the victims of the
terrible earthquake of 2005.
- In Equatorial Guinea, where the Order has been asked to carry out a study for
the country’s welfare system.
- In New Orleans, where the Order’s three North American Associations are
developing, with the Malteser International Emergency Corps, a programme for
reconstructing the houses destroyed by the Katrina hurricane.
- In central and eastern Europe, where the Order has intervened with emergency
actions in 13 countries following the recent floods as well as providing social
assistance services for the most needy.
- In Lebanon, where after the latest developments the Order’s 12 health centres
– which have been performing their work uninterruptedly for over 30 years – have
become the only respite for thousands of civilian refugees trapped in the
inaccessible areas in the south. These centres – spread over the entire Lebanese
territory – are open to all religious creeds. They are therefore oases of peace,
truth and efficiency. They help to bestow faith, courage and determination on
the minority Christian populations tempted to leave the country.
- In six regions of Afghanistan, where since 2001, in cooperation with the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, we have been
bringing help to refugee families. Sadly we have to report the death of two of
our volunteers in recent years and one of our doctors last May.
- In Palestine, in Bethlehem, where our Holy Family Hospital has had to support
a 30% increase in its activities because of financial problems in the public
sector. In 2006, 3000 children, mainly Muslim, were born in the hospital.
And with reference to our dialogue and cooperation with the Eastern Orthodox
Church, the Order has offered scholarships to young Russian Orthodox priests to
study in Rome.
These are just some of the Order of Malta’s main activities carried out last
year around the world. It would be impossible here to give an account of the
daily work of our 58 Priories and National Associations, operating through their
ambulance and assistance corps, their hospitals and medical centres, because it
would take too long.
With the aim of coordinating its activities on both a national and international
level, the Order’s government organised a number of conferences last year.
- To coincide with the state visit I made to Cameroon at the invitation of
President Biya in February, we organised in Yaounde a Regional Conference on
Africa, which examined all the Order’s activities on that continent. I would
like once again to thank warmly the President of Cameroon for his hospitality.
- The 14th Conference of European Hospitallers was held in Dublin in March.
- The 6th Conference of Hospitallers of South and North America was held in
Miami in November.
- Finally, on 5 December, we organised for the second time in Rome the Annual
Conference on the Order’s activities worldwide, this time focussing on our work
in Lebanon, the Congo and Eastern Europe. I would like to thank the many
participants at this meeting, which we will repeat next December.
For 2007 we have already scheduled:
- The Conference of European Hospitallers in Paris
- The Regional Conference of the Americas in Mexico City
- The Regional Conference of Eastern Europe in Vienna.
On the institutional level, I wish to recall the excellent and deep relations we
have with the Holy See, strengthened by the frequent and cordial conversations I
have had in the Magistral Palace with members of the Curia and ecclesiastic
personalities. I send my best wishes to the Cardinal Secretary of State and the
Secretary for Relations with States of the Holy See, both of whom have recently
taken office.
I would like equally to stress the excellence of our relations with our beloved
Italy. One of the most significant moments in these relations was the state
visit made by President Ciampi to the Magistral Palace in April, not to mention
the numerous meetings with members of Government and Parliament. I am also
pleased that two cooperation agreements have recently been signed with the
Italian Government, one with Civil Defence and the other with the Ministry of
Health.
Concerning diplomatic relations, 2006 was marked by the visits of the Heads of
State of Italy, Austria, Hungary, Burkina Faso, Seychelles, Montenegro, Costa
Rica and Serbia, of the Prime Minister of Poland, and of the Director-General of
the Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations (FAO). In turn, I
made state visits to Bulgaria and Cameroon. Over the next weeks I will go to
Brussels to meet the President of the European Commission and the members of the
Belgian government.
I would like to take this opportunity to recall Kofi Annan’s dedication to the
cause of peace and to give his successor as Secretary General of the United
Nations, Ban Ki-Moon, our best wishes for the accomplishment of his elevated
mission, so essential for the world today.
The Order of Malta’s humanitarian action and ‘specific nature’
Humanitarian activity has suddenly become newsworthy, ‘fashionable’, too often
manipulated for political or economic interests. But at the same time one has to
realise that, in many cases, commitment of a missionary or voluntary nature is
also disappearing or turning into a progressively secularised and
entrepreneurial activity. It is becoming increasingly more an ‘economic and
social activity’ and increasingly less a ‘freely given service’.
This tendency highlights the characteristic that differentiates the Order of
Malta from other humanitarian organisations. Allow me to dwell for a moment on
this issue, which journalists often raise with me.
The members of the Order experience their faith not as an instrument of
evangelisation or proselytism but as a way of living in the service of others,
of the poor and the sick, in an authentic spirit of humanity that recognises the
image of God in the person who suffers, regardless of their race, origin or
religion.
For us, what counts is not the quantity or variety of initiatives completed, and
still less the money spent or the number of medical operations performed, but
the attention devoted to the sick, to each individual, because we are always
seeking to be ‘the servants of the poor and the sick’. What counts is this
‘heartfelt concern’ with which we look at our neighbour ‘with the eyes of
Christ’, as the Holy Father says so clearly in his Encyclical Letter ‘Deus
Caritas est’. You know that we are Hospitallers first, and before anything else.
The Order of Malta is not a humanitarian organisation like others. Subject of
international public law, neutral, impartial and apolitical by vocation, the
Order is first of all, on the operational level, a transnational, global and
decentralised structure, at the service of the poor, the sick, refugees and all
those in difficulty. Its 12,500 members, its 80,000 permanent volunteers and its
professional medical staff - 11,000 doctors, nurses and stretcher-bearers - make
up an exceptional network permanently present in 120 countries.
The Order is sovereign, it does not depend on any other state or government and
it does not pursue any economic or political goal. It is an institution whose
members belong to 45 nations on the five continents, and which has diplomatic
relations with the Holy See, Italy and with another 94 states, as well as
official relations with six governments and with the European Commission. It has
permanent observer missions to the United Nations and its main agencies.
This international statute is indispensable for the Order to guarantee the
continuity of its humanitarian projects and to protect it from external
influence or coercion. It permits the Order to perform humanitarian mediation on
the basis of the prestige and consideration it has enjoyed for centuries, and in
particular by appealing to its numerous diplomats and to the international
jurists, members of the Order’s courts.
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I will visit the Holy Land during 2007 within the framework of an international
pilgrimage that I will be carrying out next October.
In this spirit I would like to recall the various observations which have been
made over the years with regard to the problem of the Holy Places, and in
particular the position of the Holy See in relation to Jerusalem. A city of
three religions, it is at the same time a land of two peoples, Jews and
Palestinians, as well as a World Heritage centre. Pilgrims from all over the
world must be able to have access to it. It should thus be given a special,
internationally guaranteed statute.
The Sovereign Order of Malta, for whom the protection of the Holy Places has
always been an absolute priority in its mission in the service of the Church and
in its hospitaller and humanitarian activities, is at the disposal of
governments to help seek any kind of solution, bearing in mind the aspirations
and legitimate interests of the different populations involved.
This is because Jerusalem must be a permanent place for seeking peace and
reconciliation between religions, peoples and cultures.
***
Your Excellencies,
In the hope of finding peaceful and just solutions for Lebanon and all the
Middle East and comforted by His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI’s promise of a
renewal of dialogue between cultures and religions, I express my heartfelt
wishes for prosperity and health to all of you, to your families and to the
peoples you represent so worthily.
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