About
the health of a nation, you can make up your mind observing the laws it
follows. Even though, many times, it is not in the masses’ power to
adopt or change some specific principles, there is always the reaction
that the people have towards them.
Not long time ago, we witnessed
the adoption of the law regarding the legalisation of abortion. Actually
what happened was the legalisation of a reality, of a sad reality, which
anyhow was “legalised” by itself. Practically, no one needed this law in
order to do a thing, which is done with serenity by the most of the
women. That is why the legalisation of this form of crime was rather an
exam for cruelty, which only was failed by some of our Parliamentarians.
During last year, it was a lot of noise because of the law regarding
the studying of religion in the school. As a member of the Moldavian
Mitropoly’s commission, established for these affaires, I had many
discussions with the representatives of the Ministry of Education. These
expressed with a lot of sincerity their antipathy towards the idea of
studying the religion as a subject matter in the school.
Honestly,
departing from our realities, neither am I a supporter of teaching
religion in the school. But my motives differ from those of the Ministry
of Education. They consented that everything be thought in the school,
even such a monster as “ the moral-spiritual education” proposed in the
Ministry’s project, but only not religion.
Maybe we got accustomed
or maybe we do not realise, but the fact that the Gospel frightens us
more than the blood of unborn children, is a sign of alienation. Nikita
Stanescu expressed once the deepness of his saddens through the
following verses: “My sadness is so great, that it hears the unborn dogs
barking at unborn children”. The world of these unborn people becomes
greater and greater. I think if we could hear what Stanescu heard, we
would find out that there are not enough unborn dogs to bark at all
unborn children. Because the people learned to do abortions, but the
dogs not yet.
Flux, 29 June 2001