Agenda item 5 – Measures to enhance the promotion and protection of the human rights and dignity of older persons
Mr. Chair,
The Delegation of the Holy See is grateful to Your Excellency and the Bureau of the Open-ended Working Group on Ageing for the preparation of this 14th Session.
The manner in which cities and rural towns are built can facilitate or impede the ability of older persons to participate in community life. Among the key aspects of housing for older persons are affordability and accessibility, particularly for those on limited or low incomes. Proximity and access to groceries, health, social and spiritual care, and public services are also important considerations. Infrastructure, transit, and housing projects should better respect the limitations in mobility, sight, and hearing of older persons as well as their pace. Furthermore, older persons should not be isolated in separate locations but rather encouraged to maintain proximity with younger generations. Intergenerational housing projects serve as a prime example for this. In conjunction with their families and informal carers, older persons should be provided with assistance in adapting their homes to their changing needs, without being forced to relocate.
The participation in public life and decision-making processes cannot be limited to the political and civil rights of an individual, it should extend to the formation of shared living bonds of belonging. Grandparents, drawing on their own experiences, can offer valuable insights and perspectives to their grandchildren. The valuable contribution that older people can make, not only to their families but to society as a whole, should be recognized. Instead, their isolation and the lack of effective support can drive them to despair and even to the desperate decision to desire to hasten the end of their lives. It is deeply concerning that older persons perceive themselves to have a lesser stake in the future, which can be attributed to the “throwaway culture,” which views them as unneeded and disposable.[1] When society offers suicide instead of compassionate accompaniment, the equal dignity of all persons at every stage of human life, until natural death, is ignored. The Holy See encourages efforts that make “each feel accompanied and cared for, even in the most delicate moments of his or her life.”[2]
Mr. Chair,
A truly inclusive society is one which welcomes the presence and perspectives of older persons as cherished members of the human family and takes meaningful steps to ensure they “take an active part in the life of society as agents of change.”[3] It is only through this approach that the dignity and rights of older persons can be fully respected.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
[1] Cf. Pope Francis, Fratelli Tutti (2020), No. 18.
[2] Pope Francis, Message to the participants in the General Assembly of the Pontifical Academy for Life on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of its founding, 19 February 2014.
[3] Pope Francis, Address to participants in the plenary assembly of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences “Disability and the human condition. Changing the social determinants of disabilities and building a new culture of inclusion,” 11 April 2024.