VATICAN CITY, 31 MAY 2008 (VIS) - This morning in the  Vatican, Benedict XVI received the Letters of Credence of Acisclo Valladares  Molina, the new ambassador of Guatemala to the Holy See. 
  In his  remarks to the diplomat, the Holy Father recalled the fact that this year marks  the 25th anniversary of John Paul II's first pastoral visit to that land "of  eternal spring", and he praised the faithfulness to the Bishop of Rome with  which the Guatemalans have always responded to the Holy See's concern for their  country. 
    "The Church", said the Pope, "shares the  concern of the Guatemalan authorities over factors that afflict a large part of  the population, such as poverty and emigration. Her rich ecclesial experience,  accumulated over the course of history, may be of help in finding the means to  face these problems from a humanitarian perspective, and to strengthen  solidarity which is indispensable in order to find effective and lasting  solutions". 
  "In this  way", he continued, "crucial technical and economic programmes must be  supplemented by other factors that foment the dignity of the person, the  stability of the family and an education that takes the most important human and  Christian values into account". Nor must "those people who have had to abandon  their land, though not forgetting it in their hearts" be overlooked. "This is a  duty of gratitude and justice towards those who are, in effect, also an  important source of income for the country in which they were born".  
  Another  challenge facing Guatemala is that of "remedying the malnutrition of many  children", said Benedict XVI, observing how "eradicating hunger and, at the same  time, ensuring healthy and sufficient nourishment, requires specific methods and  actions that enable resources to be exploited while respecting the heritage of  creation", making use not only "of the results of science, research and  technology", but also taking into account "the cycles and rhythms of nature, as  understood by people in rural areas" and protecting "the traditional uses of  indigenous communities, laying aside selfish and exclusively economic concerns".  
  This primary  right to food, said the Pope, "is intrinsically linked to the protection and  defence of human life, the firm and unbreakable rock upon which the entire  edifice of human rights rests. We can never, then, show enough ... concern for  mothers, especially those suffering serious difficulties, so that they can bring  their children into the world with dignity and thus avoid the unjustifiable  recourse to abortion. In this sense, safeguarding human life, especially that of  the unborn, ... is an ever present task which, by its nature, is linked to  facilitating the adoption of the children" with all the guarantees of the law.  
  In closing  his remarks, the Holy Father mentioned "the blight of social violence" which is  often exacerbated by "a lack of dialogue and of cohesion in families, by  profound economic inequalities, by grave negligence and shortcomings in the  field of healthcare, by drug consumption and trafficking, and by the plague of  corruption". In this context, he expressed his satisfaction at the progress  
CD/LETTERS OF CREDENCE/VALLADARES                          
 
 
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