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The New Europe and the Third World

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2024

Extract

During this conference, I suggest, we have taken part in a process of demystification of various illusions about the spiritual or moral roots of the new Europe.

Garrett Fitzgerald suggested that the European Community had brought about a revolution in consciousness in three areas: it had abandoned war as a means of settling internal disputes; it had produced a Convention on Human Rights enforceable by the European Court; and it had recognised Europe’s duty towards the Third World both in the Lomé Convention and other Community structures and in individual country aid programmes. Dr Fitzgerald anticipated criticism, and backtracked a little to say that these were all revolutions in principle. With regard to the church, he was much less positive. He said that in Ireland there was an underground church, waiting for the day when the values of Vatican II would be proclaimed anew. This note was struck in all the other reports from local churches. From France and Italy too we heard of an institutional church failing to meet the needs and aspirations of many of its members, who were turning to a variety of small groups, often viewed with concern by the hierarchy. George Vass, too, discussing Eastern Europe, questioned the assumption implicit in many discussions of lux ex Oriente. The light shining in the East is less a beacon than scattered sparks. Even the small communities which have carried the weight of renewal, he suggested, may not survive emerging from the cosy excitement of the underground into the cold wind of a pluralist society.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1992 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 See Enrique Dussell, ‘The Real Motives for the Conquest’, Concilium 1990/6, pp. 30–46, esp. p. 35: ‘Hispanic Christendom … threw itself into the activity of the “Conquest” as an immediate continuation of the “Reconquest”: the one ended in January 1492 and the other began in October of the same year.’

2 Concilium 1990/6, 1492–1992: The Voice of the Victims

3 Pablo Richard, Concilium 1990/6, pp. 59–60.

4 Jon Sobrino, ‘The Crucified Peoples: Yahweh's Suffering Servant Today’, Concilius 1990/6, pp. 120–29, quotation from pp. 120–21.

5 United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report 1991, Oxfor University Press, New York & Oxford 1991, pp. 2, 5Google Scholar.

6 Cf John Paul II, Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, 36, paras 2ff.

7 Sobrino, p. 121.

8 Much of the material in this section comes from Edward Mayo, Beyond 1992, World Development Movement Occasional Paper 1, London 1989. See also Michael Barratt Brown, ‘Europe and the Third World’, European Labour Forum 5, pp. 35–38.

9 See Frank Turner's comments in The Month, August 1991, pp. 344–49.

10 United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report 1991, p. 2.

11 Available from the Catholic Association for Racial Justice, St Vincent's Community Centre, Talma Road, London SW2 IAS, price $1.50.

12 Geffré, ‘La théologie européenne à la fin de l'eurocentrisme’, Bulletin of the European Society for Catholic Theology, pp. 50–51.

13 Geffré, p. 60.

14 Concilium 1990/6, p. 3.

15 Metz, Concilium, p. 116.