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The Irish Times, January 21, 2005
Spanish church
does U-turn on condom remark
Spain: The faces in the Bishops' Conference in
Madrid were yesterday redder than a cardinal's
cassock after they were forced to retract a
remark suggesting that the Spanish church was
defying Vatican dogma over contraception.
Father Juan Antonio Martinez Camino, spokesman
and secretary general of the Episcopal Conference,
created the uproar when, after a meeting with
the Health Minister, Ms Elena Salgado, he said:
"Artificial contraception has its place
in the integrated and global fight against
AIDS. The church is very worried and concerned
by the problem."
He went further when he apparently supported
a recent article in the medical journal, the
Lancet, which defended the ABC method (Abstinence,
Be faithful and Condoms) in the fight against
AIDS.
These unexpected remarks, accepting the use of
condoms, caused a wave of surprise in Spain,
and a severe rebuke from the Vatican for Father
Camino.
He had visited the minister to discuss the differences
between the Spanish church and the government,
not only about contraception, but on the proposal
to approve homosexual marriages, stem-cell
investigation and religious education in schools.
The bishops are even concerned about the possibility
of legalising euthanasia, even though the government
has not brought up the issue.
Ms Salgado was not the only one to welcome the
priest's apparent change of mind. She said:
"Abstinence is a personal option, but
not in line with reality for the majority of
the citizens."
Mr Enrique Miret Magdalena, a respected theologian
said he was delighted. "The Spanish church
has eventually bowed to reality. It is better
to use a condom than infect a partner with
AIDS," he said.
Ms Beatriz Gimeno, the president of the Federation
of Gays and Lesbians, expressed her surprise
and delight when she heard the news.
"It is a significant change, and I hope
the Catholic Church in other countries will
follow the example," she said.
But their delight was shortlived.
In Spain there are an estimated 125,000 AIDS
and HIV-positive sufferers, but only last November
Father Camino had criticised the government's
latest campaign, "For you, for everyone,
use one" to promote condoms. He said the
only acceptable method of preventing AIDS was
abstinence, adding that sex with any kind of
artificial contraception was unsafe, "nothing
more than a colourful dream," .
Less than 24 hours after apparently approving
condoms the Episcopal Conference was forced
to perform a dramatic U-turn. "Contrary
to what some people have reported, it is totally
untrue that the church has changed its position
on the use of artificial contraception,"
the bishops said in a curt statement.
"There are some 40 scientific methods of
preventing AIDS, and condoms are just one of
them. I am sure Father Camino meant to say
that. Catholic moral teaching condemns them,"
said Mgr Jose Luis Redredo Marchite, the Spanish-born
Vatican Secretary for Health.
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