Hopes
for the Future
64. This state of affairs,
which bodes ill for the future, causes Us great distress and anguish. But We
cherish this hope: that distrust and selfishness among nations will eventually
be overcome by a stronger desire for mutual collaboration and a heightened
sense of solidarity. We hope that the developing nations will take advantage of
their geographical proximity to one another to organize on a broader
territorial base and to pool their efforts for the development of a given
region. We hope that they will draw up joint programs, coordinate investment
funds wisely, divide production quotas fairly, and exercise management over the
marketing of these products. We also hope that multilateral and broad
international associations will undertake the necessary work of organization to
find ways of helping needy nations, so that these nations may escape from the
fetters now binding them; so that they themselves may discover the road to
cultural and social progress, while remaining faithful to the native genius of
their land.
|