Rome, 21st April 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The pro-life community is
honouring one of their most resolute members in the Vatican, Alfonso
Cardinal Trujillo, who died Saturday at the age of 72. Ordained in 1960 in
Bogota, Colombia, Cardinal Trujillo had served as the president of the
Pontifical Council for the Family since his appointment by the late Pope
John Paul II in 1990.
Pope Benedict XVI wrote to the cardinal's family, praising him for "his
wide-ranging ministerial work - as priest and auxiliary bishop of Bogota, as
archbishop of Medellin, secretary and president of the Latin American
Episcopal Council, president of the Episcopal Conference of Colombia and,
finally, president of the Pontifical Council for the Family" that Benedict
said "is clear evidence of his profound love for the Church and his
dedication to the noble cause of promoting marriage and the Christian
family."
Tributes are pouring in from around the world, praising the cardinal for his
unwavering and energetic defence of the family and the sanctity of human
life at the international level.
Fr. Frank Pavone, head of the US Priests for Life, called him "one of the
Church's strongest advocates for the dignity of the human person and the
family." Fr. Pavone added, "And both his friends and his enemies knew it."
"He knew and often said that the Church's pro-life stance was not just a
teaching, but a battle, and he willingly undertook the sacrifices of that
battle in his own life," Fr. Pavone said.
John Smeaton, head of the UK's Society for the Protection of Unborn
Children, called Cardinal Trujillo, "one of the world's greatest defenders
of the sanctity of human life." Smeaton credits Cardinal Trujillo with the
launching of the international pro-life effort that now transcends national
boundaries. Smeaton writes, "In 1994, when the United Nations threatened to
reach an international agreement supporting the right to abortion, the
cardinal sparked a lightning storm of activity around the world which
transformed the pro-life battle at an international level."
In 1995 Trujillo's activism resulted in a remarkable turn-around at the
now-famous Cairo Conference at which an alliance of religious groups drew
together to stop the threat against the unborn growing at the UN.
"Hundreds of delegates from pro-family and pro-life NGOs from around the
world, including the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children,
personally encouraged by the Cardinal, went to the United Nations Conference
on Population and Development in Cairo to lobby. The pro-abortion lobby's
objectives for the Cairo conference were defeated," Smeaton wrote.
John Smeaton recommends to readers Cardinal Trujillo's paper, "The Truth and
Meaning of Human Sexuality" (see link below) for its definitive presentation
and clarification of the Catholic Church's teaching on anti-life,
anti-family sex education that is currently favoured in the schools of
secular countries around the world.
In a telegram to the cardinal's family, Pope Benedict confirmed that he will
preside at the funeral Mass, to be conducted at the famous altar of the
Cathedra in St. Peter's Basilica at 11 a.m. on Wednesday 23rd April.
This year, Cardinal Trujillo announced the start of the Vatican's campaign
to institute a United Nations moratorium on abortion, which will begin in
Latin America. It had been planned that he would go directly to heads of
national governments as well as organizations throughout Latin America, in
an attempt to convince them to sign a petition to the United Nations to halt
abortions worldwide. The Cardinal was to continue from Latin America to the
United States, Canada, and then to Africa, the Middle East, and Europe.
As head of the Council for the Family, Trujillo's was frequently the voice
of clarity defending and explaining many of the Church's teachings on
"difficult" topics.
In 2003, Cardinal Trujillo was given the hostile attention of the mainstream
press for having denounced the use of condoms in AIDS prevention. The
world's media and AIDS organizations alike went into a frenzy of
condemnation when he pointed out that condoms do not provide full protection
against HIV/AIDS and tend to increase its spread by creating a false sense
of security that encourages dangerous sexual practices.
In May 2005, shortly after the election of Pope Benedict XVI, Trujillo told
media that "gay marriage" was "a crime which represents the destruction of
the world". He said that parliaments which "open the way for same sex
'marriage'...destroy piece by piece the institution of the family the most
valuable heritage of peoples and humanity. In these unions there are no
promises for the partners or for the children, no stability, nothing before
society or God, but they demand all the benefits of authentic marriage."
This was a reiteration of an earlier statement in 2004 when he said that
homosexual civil unions are a "grave sign of dehumanization".