The battleground is the United Nations. "Today, the nature of the family is confused by so many ... It is scandalous," said the Holy See's representative to the U.N. amid negotiations last month in New York.
View this image " Kevin Lamarque / Reuters NEW YORK - Pope Francis’ softening tone on LGBT issues does not appear to have been matched by a meaningful shift in policy in the realm of international diplomacy. In two recent confrontations at United Nations headquarters in New York, the Vatican - a “permanent observer” with the almost all the same right that states have to participate in debates and closed negotiations - has held a hard line in fighting to preserve a narrow definition of the word “family” in international law. (It is one of only two entities with this status; the other is Palestine.) “I cannot see a change that has trickled down” since Francis became pope, said one diplomat from a country that supports LGBT rights who asked to speak anonymously to discuss closed negotiations. LGBT activists and supportive diplomats have been squaring off against Vatican diplomats at the U.N. as long as LGBT rights under international law have been at issue. And under Francis, the Holy See continues to play its longstanding role: inspiring opposition to LGBT rights proposals, crafting strategy, and articulating principles of international law to justify their exclusion. On March 19, the Holy See co-sponsored a public event at the U.N. headquarters in New York with Belarus, Qatar, Indonesia, and the Arizona-based group Family Watch International, which describes its mission as promoting “the family based on marriage between a man and a woman as the societal unit that provides the best outcome for men, women and children.” It was focused on making the case that the family should be prioritized in economic development strategy, but the head of the Holy See’s U.N. mission, Archbishop Francis Chullikatt, was explicit that concerns about the definition of “the family” were also very much on his mind. “The family, as a union of husband and wife, in which the children are born and raised as the first community of society is a concept that until very recently in human history was shared in all types of societies whether religious or not religious,” Chullikatt said. “Today, the nature of the family is confused by so many ... It is scandalous that the very institution or unit that is most important to these discussions and policy decisions is considered unwelcome.” The event was held just as negotiations on the Agreed Conclusions of the 2014 meeting of the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women were getting serious. The writing of the Agreed Conclusions is the focus of the two-week event, because it is the declaration of the global situation for women and girls and lays out principles to drive policy development. Nations including Brazil, the Philippines, Israel, and the U.S. had proposed language on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity, while countries like Belarus, Qatar, and Russia had proposed language on “the family.” The “family” language was mostly in the context of economic development, but delegations supporting LGBT rights wanted this broadened to “the family” and additional language acknowledging that “various forms of the family exist.” Though the Holy See had not put its name on any formal amendments to the Agreed Conclusions, its
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