Synod focus on ‘inclusion’ should embrace people with disabilities, member says

Synod focus on ‘inclusion’ should embrace people with disabilities, member says
Enrique Alarcón García, president of Frater España, speaking to reporters at the Vatican press office on October 14. Screenshot: CNS/Vatican Media, via YouTube

VATICAN (CNS): While many people hear about the synod’s focus on “inclusion” and think of the synod’s controversial discussions about LGBTQ Catholics or more roles for women, Enrique Alarcón García, president of Frater España, a Christian fraternity of people with disabilities in Spain, said on October 14 that those weren’t the first topics his community thought of. 

In many places in the world, including in Rome, people with disabilities cannot enter Catholic churches because of the architectural barriers, but even when they do, “we are not asked anything and we are not asked to participate either,” Alarcón said.

“The Church came out with a bright sign with the word ‘inclusion’ on it, a house for all. Inclusion, we said, but is it possible?” he wondered.

Alarcón, a papally appointed member of the assembly of the Synod of Bishops, said that this changed with the preparations for the synod on synodality.

The Dicastery for Laity, the Family and Life organised synod listening sessions for people with disabilities in 2022, which Alarcón said was a “great surprise,” one that continued when he and four others were asked to submit a report to the synod and, even more, when he was named a synod member.

Still, he had some suspicions that his presence was “something good for publicity” and that, seated in his wheelchair, he would be the object of pity or paternalism from the cardinals and bishops, something he said he has experienced in the past.

“But the pope has spoken to us through this whole synodal process and tells us, ‘No, as a baptised member of Church, you are a member by right and you also are called to be an evangelising member,” he said. “That brought real joy to my heart and is making it possible for people with disabilities around the world to start looking at the Church differently.”

For Alarcón, the Vatican’s decision not to hold the assembly in the theatre-like audience hall with its steep rows of chairs, but rather in the audience hall at round tables, was more than a change of atmosphere.

With his wheelchair, he could sit at a table with other members, “occupying the same place and at the same height,” he said. It was a sign of solidarity and of a sincere desire to work toward being “a Church where we can all be together and where we are all called to carry out our evangelising task,” he said.

The assembly’s work in small groups, where members take turns listening to each other, “is very important,” he said, “because for a person with disabilities, in most of the world, it is very difficult to be able to speak with people who are educated not to listen, but only to speak, as happens often with bishops and, especially, cardinals.”

Alarcón said, “I think the synod has a pedagogical character, because the hierarchy is seeing that it is possible to have a dialogue, to listen.” 

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