Cardinal Pietro Parolin (C) surrounded by Nobel Peace Prize winners, signs the “Declaration on Human Fraternity” during the “NotAlone World Fraternity” meeting in St.Peter’s square at the Vatican, on June 10, 2023. Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa stands with fellow Nobel laureates (2nd from the left). (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP) (AFP or licensors)
By Zeus Legaspi
Jun 13 2023
A Filipino Nobel laureate reflects on her experience in joining the Vatican in its appeal for closer brotherhood and sisterhood to promote peace, justice, equality, and truth.
Maria Ressa, the first Nobel Peace Prize recipient from the Philippines, discussed her participation in the first World Meeting on Human Fraternity at Saint Peter’s Square on Sunday.
Ressa was among the 30 Nobel laureates who convened on Saturday, 10 June, and presented the landmark Declaration on Human Fraternity, which they had drafted earlier that day.
‘That was new to me’
The Filipino Nobel laureate expressed her surprise at the emphasis placed on values that are typically absent in conventional policy discussions during her conversations with fellow laureates about the declaration.
“Normally, if you are at a gathering where you’re looking for policy decisions…your rational side will attack the problem. But yesterday, it was interesting because it brought words that you would not normally say in a policy discussion,” Ressa told journalists.
“Things like humanity, love, faith. That was new to me,” she added. On Saturday, the Nobel laureates called for an end to war, fear, and sexual and domestic violence. They also called for the promotion of peace, justice, and equality.
“Compassion, sharing, generosity, sobriety, and responsibility are for us the choices that nurture personal fraternity, the fraternity of the heart,” the declaration stated.