Pope Leo XIV tells the World that Defeating Hunger is the Path to Peace
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Leo XIV visits the headquarters of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome to mark World Food Day and the 80th anniversary of the organization’s founding. In his address he reaffirms the Holy See’s closeness to the institution and calls for a shared global commitment to end hunger and malnutrition.
Sandwiched between the Caracalla Baths, the Aventine Hill and the Circus Maximus and the high Roman ideals they represent, the FAO headquarters in Rome is a microcosm that represents the world. Its mission to defeat hunger, food insecurity, and malnutrition in a sustainable way, upholding the dignity of every human being, resonates in a world where conflict, the climate crisis, forced migration and a widening gap between the rich and poor, cast doubt on the goodwill of the international community to place the human person above profit in the name of justice and peace.
That’s what Pope Leo XIV did on Thursday morning when he
addressed a star-studded audience of UN and world leaders and goodwill
ambassadors gathered at FAO to mark World Food Day and the organisation’s
80th anniversary.
“We cannot be content with proclaiming values; we must
embody them,” he said, calling for a renewed ethical foundation: “Slogans do
not lift people from misery. We must place the human person above profit and
guarantee food security, access to resources, and sustainable rural
development.”
His visit, in the footsteps of all his predecessors starting with Pope Paul VI in 1970, provided him with the occasion to renew the Holy See’s long-standing support for the UN agency and to urge the international community to redouble its efforts to eradicate hunger, malnutrition, and food insecurity — evils he described as “a moral wound that afflicts the whole human family.”
“Whoever suffers from hunger is my brother”
Choosing to speak both in Spanish and in English, the Pope
said that the fight against hunger “is not only a political or economic task
but a profoundly human and moral duty.”
“Whoever suffers from hunger is not a stranger,” he said.
“He is my brother, and I must help him without delay.”
He recalled that eighty years after the FAO’s creation,
millions of people still lack adequate food and nutrition.
“Ending these evils,” he said, “requires the contribution of
all: governments, institutions, civil society, and every individual person.”
A collective moral failure
Citing current data that show over 673 million people go to
bed hungry and 2.3 billion lack a nutritious diet, the Pope said these are not
abstract numbers but “broken lives and mothers unable to feed their children.”
He denounced “an economy without a soul” and a system of
resource distribution that leaves vast populations in misery, calling the
persistence of hunger in an age of abundance “a collective moral failure and a
historical fault.”
“Food must never be a weapon”
Pope Leo expressed deep concern that food is once again
being used as a weapon of war, calling this a “cruel strategy that denies men,
women, and children their most basic right — the right to life.”
Recalling the UN Security Council’s past condemnation of
starvation as a war crime, he lamented that “this consensus seems to have
faded.” The silence of those dying of hunger, he said, “cries out in the
conscience of humanity,” urging all nations to act decisively.
“Hunger is not humanity’s destiny but its downfall,” the
Pope said. “It is not just a problem to be solved; it is a cry that rises to
heaven.”
An ethical vision of politics
The Pope did not neglect to reaffirm a concept that was dear
to his predecessor, Pope Francis, who never tired of pointing out that to throw
food away means to throw people away.
He too condemned the waste of food while others starve, and
urged world leaders to end “outrageous paradoxes” and to “awaken from the
lethargy that dulls our compassion.”
“Water is life, water is food”
Referring to this year’s World Food Day theme, the Pope said
the message — “Water is life, water is food. Leave no one behind” —
calls all people to act together.
“At a time marked by division and indifference, unity
through cooperation is not just an ideal but a duty,” he said. “Only by joining
hands can we build a future in which food security is a right, not a
privilege.”
He paid special tribute to women, whom he described as “the
silent architects of survival, the first to sow hope and the careful stewards
of creation.” Recognizing their contribution, he said, is “not only a matter of
justice, but a guarantee of a more humane and lasting food system.”
Renewing multilateral cooperation
Pope Leo reaffirmed the importance of multilateralism and
dialogue among nations, urging that the voices of the poor be heard directly.
“We must build a vision that allows every actor in the international community
to respond effectively to the genuine needs of those we are called to serve,”
he said.
He also made a heartfelt appeal for the many peoples
suffering hunger and violence in Ukraine, Gaza, Haiti, Afghanistan, Mali, the
Central African Republic, Yemen, and South Sudan, insisting that “the
international community cannot look the other way.”
“Give them something to eat”
Ending his address, the Holy Father quoted Jesus’ words to
His disciples, “Give them something to eat” (Mk 6:37). This
Gospel command, he added, “remains a pressing challenge for the international
community.”
“Do not tire of asking God,” he concluded, “for the courage
and the energy to work for a justice that will yield lasting and beneficial
results. You can always count on the solidarity of the Holy See and of the
entire Church, which stands ready to serve the poorest and most disadvantaged
throughout the world.”
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