Vatican
City (AFP) - The pope on Wednesday contrasted the world's 820 million hungry
people with those who turn food into "an avenue of personal destruction"
through overeating, in comments to mark World Food Day.
Pope
Francis noted that the "distorted relationship between food and
nutrition" has left almost 700 million people overweight, "victims of
improper dietary habits".
"We
are in fact witnessing how food is ceasing to be a means of subsistence and
turning into an avenue of personal destruction," the pontiff said in a
message to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation.
People
suffer from diabetes and heart disease because of overeating, but also from
anorexia and bulimia through deliberate undereating, the pope said.
He called
for "the cultivation of lifestyles inspired by gratitude for the gifts we
have received and the adoption of a spirit of temperance (and) moderation."
"By
adopting such a lifestyle, we will grow in a fraternal solidarity that seeks
the common good and avoids the individualism and egocentrism that serve only to
generate hunger and social inequality."
"It is
a cruel, unjust and paradoxical reality that, today, there is food for everyone
and yet not everyone has access to it, and that in some areas of the world food
is wasted, discarded and consumed in excess."
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