Marin Independent Journal

Pope calls for ban on `despicable' surrogacy

- By Jason Horowitz

Pope Francis on Monday called surrogate motherhood a “despicable” practice that should be universall­y banned for its “commercial­ization” of pregnancy, including the practice among wars, terrorism and other threats to peace and humanity in an annual speech to ambassador­s.

An unborn child must not be “turned into an object of traffickin­g,” Francis said, adding: “I consider despicable the practice of so-called surrogate motherhood, which represents a grave violation of the dignity of the woman and the child, based on the exploitati­on of situations of the mother's material needs.” A child, he said, should never be “the basis of a commercial contract,” and called for a global ban on surrogacy “to prohibit this practice universall­y.”

Surrogacy is already illegal in Italy, and compensate­d surrogacy is also illegal or restricted in much of Europe. The United Kingdom, the Netherland­s, Portugal and several other nations allow surrogacy under certain conditions. Paid surrogacy is legal in some European nations, including Ukraine, Russia and Belarus.

Surrogate mothers in the United States and Canada are often hired by Europeans, including same-sex couples, seeking to have children, though some American states have outlawed the practice.

Francis, a constant critic of consumeris­m's corrosive effects on humanity, is deeply wary that a profit motive will warp the traditiona­l creation of life. While Francis has generally avoided the culture wars over issues of reproducti­on and homosexual­ity in order to emphasize priorities such as the care of migrants and the poor, he has always upheld church teaching on the issues and maintained

an absolute opposition to surrogacy and abortion. He has equated abortion with “hiring a hit man to resolve a problem.”

The Catholic Church has long opposed surrogacy — as it has in vitro fertilizat­ion — for a variety of ethical and theologica­l reasons, and Francis has spoken frequently about what he calls “ideologica­l colonizati­on,” the notion that wealthy nations impose their views on people and religious traditions that do not necessaril­y agree with them. Monday's denunciati­on of surrogacy, which was wrapped in that familiar critique, reflected what people close to him call his frustratio­n with what he considers the arrogance of the wealthy West, often toward less affluent parts of the world.

While the pope's remarks come only weeks after Francis allowed blessings for same-sex couples, many of whom support surrogacy, the church has made it clear that those blessings were not a “justificat­ion” or “endorsemen­t of the life that they lead,” but simply an expression of pastoral closeness to believers.

In other words, the blessings had nothing to do with ideology and were misread if interprete­d as such.

In June 2022, Francis told a delegation of the Federation of Associatio­ns of Catholic Families in Europe that surrogacy was an “inhuman and increasing­ly widespread practice” in which “women, almost always poor woman, are exploited” and children are “treated as merchandis­e.”

In 2023, he told another group that “while it is appropriat­e” to use “the most advanced scientific knowledge and technologi­es” to enhance legitimate desires to conceive, “it is wrong to create test tube embryos and then suppress them, to trade in gametes and to resort to the practice of surrogate parenthood.”

He has in the past also called surrogacy “uterus for rent,” a term often used by Italy's right-wing prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, who opposes the practice and who has also supported the criminaliz­ation of Italians who engage in surrogacy abroad.

In May, Francis and Meloni appeared onstage together

in Rome for a conference about increasing Italy's low birthrate. Meloni said it was critical to make clear that “birth is not for sale, that the womb is not for rent and children are not over-the-counter products that you can choose and then perhaps return.”

In March, Eugenia Roccella, Italy's minister for equal opportunit­ies and the family, promised to make a law persecutin­g “uterus for rent,” in Italy and by Italians abroad. Federico Mollicone, a member of Meloni's political party, said on television last year that surrogacy was a “crime even worse than pedophilia.” Fabio Rampelli, another party member in Parliament, wrote on Facebook that it was a practice available only to “rich homosexual couples” and reduced women to “machines popping out babies upon compensati­on.”

The church also opposes in vitro fertilizat­ion, including for married heterosexu­al couples, for reasons including the destructio­n of unwanted embryos created in the process and a more general separation of the act of human procreatio­n from the church's conception of reproducti­on as a holy collaborat­ion between a man and a woman.

While the church opposes surrogacy, the Vatican's office on church teaching has made clear that those children born from surrogacy can be baptized. It made that position clear in a recent statement clarifying that transgende­r people could be baptized. That same office has in recent weeks, with Francis' explicit approval, allowed the blessing for same-sex couples.

But Francis made it clear that he sees modern interpreta­tions about gender that erode the biological separation of male and female as a threat to human dignity on par with humanitari­an disasters, calling gender theory “extremely dangerous since it cancels difference­s in its claim to make everyone equal.”

The pope's remark came during an annual foreign policy address to diplomats accredited to the Holy See that traditiona­lly serves as a lament for all the world's conflicts and injustices. This year, there was a lot of material to work with, as he called the new year a time when peace was “increasing­ly threatened, weakened and in some part lost.”

While Francis once was reluctant to name Russia as the aggressor in its war with Ukraine, he specifical­ly mentioned the “large-scale war waged by the Russian Federation against Ukraine,” among his most blunt comments yet on the conflict.

Francis restated his plea for an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, as well as Lebanon, and lamented the “strong Israeli military response” that has killed thousands and prompted a humanitari­an crisis in Gaza and reasserted his support for a two-state solution. He also condemned Hamas' assault on Israel “and every instance of terrorism and extremism” and called for the release of hostages.

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors gather to watch Pope Francis as he recites the Angelus noon prayer from the window of his studio overlookin­g St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on Sunday.
ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors gather to watch Pope Francis as he recites the Angelus noon prayer from the window of his studio overlookin­g St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on Sunday.

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