A senior cardinal
who was considered for the papacy last year said in
comments published Friday that the Roman Catholic Church
should soften its ban on condoms because of the
scourge of AIDS.
"We must do
everything to fight AIDS," said Cardinal Carlo Maria
Martini, the retired archbishop of Milan, in Italy's
newsweekly L'Espresso. "Certainly, the use of
condoms can constitute in certain situations a lesser
evil."
While there is no
specific, authoritative Vatican policy on using condoms
to protect against HIV, the Vatican opposes condoms because
they are a form of what the church calls artificial
contraception. Pope Benedict XVI repeated the
Vatican's position last June, when he told African bishops
abstinence is the only "fail-safe" way to prevent the spread
of HIV.
The 79-year-old
Martini was considered a liberal alternative to Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger in the 2005 conclave that elected
Ratzinger, now Benedict XVI, as pope.
Martini is one of
the most prominent church leaders to call for an easing
of the position on condoms. Others include Belgian cardinal
Godfried Danneels and Cardinal Javier Lozano
Barragan of Mexico, who has said condoms could
sometimes be condoned, such as when a woman cannot refuse
the sexual advances of her HIV-positive husband.
Martini was
responding to questions from the Italian scientist and
bioethicist Ignazio Marino, who heads the transplant center
at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. Martini
agreed with the questioner that the church could
consider condoms a "lesser evil" than the risk of the
disease.
"There's also the
unique situation of a married couple, one of whom is
afflicted with AIDS. That one is obliged to protect the
other, and the other must be able to protect him or
herself," the cardinal said.
However, Martini
noted that it's one thing to condone the lesser evil in
such cases and quite another for the church to promote
condom use. (AP)
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