Galloping urbanization and cultural rootlessness
8. Under various pressures, such as poverty and the under-development of
rural areas deprived of indispensable goods and services as well as, in some
countries, armed conflicts which force millions of people to leave behind their
home and culture, the growing number of people on the move is emptying the
countryside of people and causing the great cities to expand excessively. In
addition to these economic and social pressures, cities have the fascination of
the well-being and entertainment they offer, as vividly portrayed by the means
of social communication. Through lack of planning, the outskirts or suburbs of
every megalopolis are like ghettos. These are often huge agglomerations of people
who are socially rootless, politically powerless, economically marginalized and
culturally isolated.
Cultural rootlessness, which has so many causes, shows how important
cultural roots are. It contributes to a loss of people's social and cultural
identity and dignity. People whose lives are thus unravelled become easy prey
for dehumanizing business practices. In this century, as never before, people
have shown how capable and talented they are. But, at the same time, never
throughout history had there been so many denials and violations of human
dignity, bitter fruits of denying or forgetting God. Cultural fragmentation
confines values to the private sphere: this alters morality and weakens
spirituality to such an extent that one reaches the terrifying concept of the
«culture of death», a real semantic nonsense for a counter-culture which
reveals the sinister contradiction between the affirmation of a will to live
and an obstinate rejection of God, the source of all life (cf. Evangelium
Vitae, 11-12 and 19-28).
«The evangelization of urban culture is a formidable challenge for the
Church. Just as she was able to evangelize rural culture for centuries, the
Church is called in the same way today to undertake a methodical and
far-reaching urban evangelization through catechesis, the liturgy and the very
way in which her pastoral structures are organized» (Ecclesia in America,
21).
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