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Interview with Bishop Sgreccia,
Vice President of the Academy for Life
VATICAN CITY, NOV. 13, 2000 (ZENIT.org).- Biogenetics' new
frontiers pose
new hopes and fears, a
debate that materializes in endless discussions on
issues like genetically
modified corn or tomatoes.
In order to clarify the moral implications of biotechnology,
ZENIT
interviewed Bishop Elio
Sgreccia, director of the Bioethics Institute of
Rome's University of the
Sacred Heart, vice president of the Pontifical
Academy for Life, and
co-author of the book "Animal and Vegetable
Biotechnology" New
Frontiers and New Responsibilities" ("Biotecnologie
animali e vegetali: nuove
frontiere e nuove responsabilità"), published by
the Vatican Press.
--Q: There are those who speak of biotechnology as the
millennium's
monster. What is the
Pontifical Academy for Life's view on biotechnology?
--Bishop Sgreccia: Biotechnology must be seen in its ability
to improve,
develop, and complement
nature. For example, it is possible to make
biological agents,
constructed biotechnologically, which act in
decontaminating the sea
from oil stains and transforming biomasses and refuse.
Biotechnology must also be seen in its capacity to improve
vegetable
products and increase
certain animal resources to foster progress in
developing countries.
--Q: Some believe the multinationals want to use
biotechnological resources
to maintain positions of
power over the market and guarantee themselves
greater profits in
relation to underdeveloped countries.
--Bishop Sgreccia: These are risks and dangers that are part
of human
egotism, which must be
controlled and uprooted ethically and legally.
However, is it possible and wise to try to improve
cultivation so that it
can sink roots even in
difficult terrain; to improve the quality of the
production of fruits and
vegetables; to increase the production of meat to
feed whole populations; to
eliminate harmful agents, in plots of land,
through biotechnology. Our
objective should be to eliminate risks and
damages and, at the same
time, increase advantages.
We certainly are not dreamers who blindly approve any
biotechnological use.
There are very specific
limits, which must be respected. It is true that
man can use animals and
vegetables for his food and for his safety. But it
is also true that he
cannot do what he feels like indiscriminately. This is
why limits have been
established, for example, in regard to the creation of
new species.
--Q: Another controversial point is conservation of
biodiversity. It has
been said that genetically
modified products will eliminate all previous
varieties.
--Bishop Sgreccia: In fact, biotechnology is useful in the
field of
biodiversity, because we
can conserve seeds and animal gametes and, through
artificial reproduction,
intervene wherever there is danger of extinction.
Technology that selects
and reinforces a species is also able to conserve
and protect species from
extinction that should be protected.
--Q: Some believe that all technological discoveries are
contaminating by
their very nature.
--Bishop Sgreccia: Technology is a means and, as such, we
must know how to
use it. Technology results
from exploration of the human body and the
universe. Through [the use
of] computers and electronics we do no more than
boost our neurons.
If this is the creative, anthropological origin of
technology, ethics,
which stems from it, is no
more than placing it at the service of human
life, integrity, the
health of man, [and] the balanced conservation of
forces and elements of the
world, ranging from air and water, to animals
and vegetables. It is our
responsibility to regulate the faucets; we have
the tools to do so, we are
lacking responsibility and, perhaps, the
necessary harmony to do
it.
--Q: The authors of the Earth's
Charter say
that
traditional religions, especially Christianity, are too
anthropocentric. This
would be the reason for the lack of attention to the
natural world in the
history of humanity.
--Bishop Sgreccia: The Christian religion offers fundamental
principles for
respect of the
environment, not only insofar as it relates to animals or
vegetables, but also to
inanimate creation, insofar as everything is
conceived as a gift of
God, placed in man's hands with the command to take
care of it and govern it.
St. Francis is often quoted in this area; but I insist on
saying that
attention must also be
paid to the Benedictine tradition, which has kept
our European regions from
ecological disaster, by teaching and practicing
an agriculture that still
gives fruits, by controlling rivers, looking
after forests, refining
agricultural techniques. The Benedictine tradition
of "ora et labora,"
which sees in work a form of praying, in respect for
the Creator, is an example
of care for the environment.
Another fundamental point of Christianity is the incarnation
of Jesus, Son
of God, who, by becoming
man creates fraternity among men. We Catholics
make every effort to
create ties of fraternity with less fortunate peoples,
with the poor, the weak,
with the victims of underdevelopment. What
stronger foundation is
there to impede the exploitation of man against man,
and of man against
creation?
ZE00111304
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