MESSAGE
OF THE PONTIFICAL COUNCIL FOR THE PASTORAL CARE
OF MIGRANTS AND ITINERANT PEOPLE
On the occasion of
World
Tourism Day 2007(September 27th)
“Tourism Opens Doors for Women”
This year,
World Tourism Day is dedicated to women, to whom tourism offers
ample opportunities to enter the working world, which is so
difficult and competitive today. Statistics indicate that the
presence of women in this sector is greater than 50%, while
almost half of the customers and two-thirds of the students
are women. Tourism, therefore, represents an “open door”
for women. It is in harmony with their psychological, organizational
and communicative characteristics. Women’s sensitivity
and flexibility find countless occasions to manifest themselves
and emerge, starting from the humblest level of work to high-level
responsibilities .Women’s gifts of creativity, their inclination
towards hospitality, and their ability to be in tune with the
thoughts of others help them to have insight into the tastes
and aspirations of tourists. For Christians, Saint Martha, the
patron saint of hoteliers, who hosted Jesus in Bathany, is an
example that is still up-to-date. She shows us the spirit of
this service when “concern, attention, and helpful promptness
to the wishes of others are given with a spirit of Christian
sincerity, then they not only go to a ‘customer’
but also to a brother, indeed, they go to Christ himself’
*
For women,
tourism represents above all new possibilities for social promotion
and access to the common good, and perhaps a new way to live
their maternal nature and commitment in the world. When many
new career paths open up to the world of women, the sphere of
responsibilities also broadens, the premise for a different
future. This prospect can have great consequences that refer
women to new commitments and decisions before choice to be made
in the family and in society, and for Christian women, in Church
as well. This specific female presence can even influence the
future of countries and the ecclesial community.
Tourism
is surely an opportunity, an ”open door” for women
in society and the Church, but it is not without difficulties
and challenges. The first and greatest difficulty is felt in
the family context where the time available must be divided
between their role of primary educators, their status in the
home and work. In this regard, we are witnessing a real social
transformation. As to the professional aspect, despite the fact
that 30% of managers are women, it is noted that women‘s
qualification is still modest with repercussions on salaries
that tend to be lower for them. The goal proposed of equal pay
for equal work is still far away.
Unfortunately,
some situations of absolute injustice exist for women: that
is, when they are obliged to accept forms of work that are “real
slavery”, as in the case of what is called sex tourism.
In this regard, John Paul 11 spoke out in 1995* against “the
widespread hedonistic and commercial culture which encourages
the systematic exploitation of sexuality”, and recently
Pope Benedict XVI also strongly condemned this in the Message
for the World Day of Migrants and Rufugees 2006.* This Coucil
has taken up the theme again in the Guidelines for the Pastoral
Care of the Road, where it is stated that prostitution and sexual
exploitation “constitute an offense to human dignity and
a grave violation of fundamental rights”.* The work done
in this context by Religious Congregations to support these
women and young girls and bring them back to a dignified life
is praiseworthy.
“In
some cultures…women are still firmly subordinated to the
arbitrary decisions of men, with grave consequences for their
personal dignity and for the exercise of their fundament freedoms”.*
In order to achieve a real equality of rights, with the resulting
equal terms in work, salary and religious freedom, much remains
to be done. Nevertheless, also through their efforts in the
area of tourism, women must strive to overcome inequality and
share equal responsibilities with men, as seen in the creative
design defined by Genesis (Gen1.28). Pope Benedict XVI stated
“I believe that women themselves, with their energy and
strength, with their predominance, so to speak, with what I
would call their “Spiritual power”, will know how
to make their own space. And we will have to try and listen
to God so as not to oppose him but, on the contrary, to rejoice
when the female element achieves the fully effective place in
the Church best suited to it, starting with the Mother of God
and with Mary Magdalene”.*
From this
perspective, women also have a role of great responsibility
to play in the pastoral care of tourism .Women ‘s “diakonia”
is well suited to many circumstances in the world of tourism
where one moves and interacts, and has as its basis a Christian
view of tourism, which is a service to people and the community.
In fact, through their particular gifts of receptivity and altruism,
and their ability to appreciate everything that expresses beauty
and goodness in the creation, women can try to reduce the distances
between human beings of different cultures and religious, and
in this way open up spaces for dialogue. Appropriate formation
can lead women to “a manifestation of the hope that sustains
everyone and renews”.* Being interested in and available
for the needs of travelers, including those who are less favored,
women can favor their participation in the liturgical celebrations,
especially to help the local communities in countries with a
Christian minority that have a great need for support. In this
way women have the possibility to help develop a new humanism
by putting the “female genius” at the service of
humanity and also revealing the maternal face of the Church.
Holy Mary
of the Way, an itinerant Woman, be an example for today’s
women involved in tourism (mothers, wives, daughters, sisters,
workers) so that ethical and Christian convictions will always
be present for them on the road to be traveled, and so that
they will not lose sight of the final goal by following transitory,
ephemeral interests. May the door opened by tourism become a
“holy door” for women, through the Grace of God.
+Renato
Raffaele Cardinal Martino, President
+Agostino
Marchetto,Archbishop, Secretary
*
PAUL
VI, Address to the representatives of hotel tourism, march
7, 1964: AAS LVI, 1964, p. 13.
*
JOHN
PAUL II, Letter to Women, June 29, 1995, No. 5: L’
Osservatore Romano, Weekly Edition in English, N. 28(1399)-12.07.1995,pp.1-3.
*
Cf.
BENEDICT XVI, Message for the World Day of Migrants and
Refugees 2006, on the theme Migration: A sign of the Times:
People on the Move XXXVII (2005), No. 99, p. 58.
*
PONTIFICAL
COUNCIL FOR THE PASTORAL CARE OF MIGRANTS AND ITINERANT
PEOPLE, Guidelines for the pastoral care of the Road, May
24, 2007, No.88.
*
BENEDICT
XVI, Message for the world day of peace 2007, No.7: L’Osservatore
Romano, Weekly Edition in English, N. 51/52 (1974), December
20-27, 2006, p. 6/7
*
BENEDICT
XVI, Interview in preparation for the apostolic voyage to
Munich, Allotting and Regensburg (September 9-14, 2006),
Castel Gandolfo, August 5, 2006: L’Osservatore Romano,
Weekly Edition in English, N.35 (1958), August 30,2006,
p.8.
*
PONTIFICAL
COUNCIL FOR THE PASTORAL CARE OF MIGRANTS AND ITINERANT
PEOPLE, Guidelines for the pastoral care of Tourism, June
29, 2001, No.22: Special insert L’Osservatore Romano,
Weekly Edition in English, N.15 (1738)-April 10, 2002, pp.
I-VIII.