Prominent leaders of the Catholic Church in the Philippines have criticized an aid moratorium by Canadian bishops on at least four Philippine associations suspected of "violating the social teachings of the Church."
The funding has been halted as the Filipino groups are being investigated for alleged connections to abortion, artificial conception and other possible conflicts with Catholic teaching.
The Catholic Register reported that a seven-page letter addressed to the Canadian bishops and the leaders of Development and Peace, the four Philippine partners affected by the moratorium have said they have never been told why the funds raised from a Share Lent campaign, was being withheld.
Development and Peace (The Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace) is the official international development organization of the Catholic Church in Canada and the Canadian member of Caritas Internationalis. It is a membership led organization supported by parish collections, individual donations and government grants, principally from Global Affairs Canada.
"We regard this as deeply unfair and inconsistent with the partnership principles and practices to which D&P proudly declares itself adherent," said the letter, obtained by the French Canadian Catholic news agency Presence. Development and Peace's temporary moratorium, the letter added, is already affecting "peacebuilding, agrarian reform, urban shelter and community development work in the Philippines."
"For a distant and anonymous committee with no knowledge of our circumstances, our lived experiences, or the challenges facing us, to make summary and unilateral judgments of us at a time of growing authoritarianism is deeply dangerous," said the letter, noting that the Catholic Church has recently been threatened by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte.
The April 3 letter was sent by email to Bishop Lionel Gendron, CCCB president, and Evelyne Beaudoin, president of the national council for Development and Peace. All members of the national council also received it, as well as all Canadian bishops. The letter was sent a few days ahead of April 7, when Canadian parishes were actively promoting the Share Lent Campaign.
Among the signatories to the Philippine letter were Fr. Edwin Gariguez, secretary-general of Caritas Philippines, and Redemptorist Fr. Leo Armada, chairman of the board of Francesco Inc., a consortium that recently inaugurated the Village of Pope Francis, where 1,300 survivors of 2013 Haiyan typhoon now live.
Philippine groups also have "no way to know the charges against them," said the signatories, upset that "the truth of the charges is determined by an opaque ad hoc committee."
In 2018, information about Development and Peace partners prompted some Canadian bishops to withhold donations raised during the Share Lent campaign. Allegations that 52 of approximately 180 partners were not acting in accordance with Church teaching were made in an unreleased document called "2018 CCCB Research Findings on D&P Partners."
Development and Peace staff responded last fall in a 290-page document rejecting the vast majority of the allegations, except for five partners which needed a more in-depth review.
Most of the 52 partners are in Latin America (25) and Asia (15). Only when Development and Peace agreed to withhold donations to the 52 partners targeted by the allegations was it able to receive all the withheld funds (about $2 million). At the beginning of April 2019, the organization announced that the moratorium affecting the 52 organization would be maintained during the 2019 Share Lent campaign.