CEBU CITY, Philippines—A day after Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle condemned politicians for causing widespread poverty by plundering money for the poor, African Cardinal John Onaiyekan told the 51st International Eucharistic Congress (IEC) here yesterday that greed and social iniquity have made the poor poorer and their situation “more acute and unbearable.”
And like Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, Onaiyekan also apologized for the Church’s failings in helping the poor.
Not inevitable
“Poverty is not inevitable,” said Onaiyekan, archbishop of Abuja, Nigeria. “Rather, it is due to human failures, like bad distribution of the Earth’s goods because of injustice and greed.”
Cardinal Oswald Gracias, archbishop of Bombay, India, likewise deplored hunger in the world which he traced to corruption and social injustice.
Saying that in South Asia alone, 276 million people were “chronically undernourished, Gracias noted, “There is enough food in the world to feed everyone. However, the injustice lies in the improper distribution of food.”
The Indian prelate quoted St. Pope John Paul II: “One of the greatest injustices in the contemporary world consists precisely in this: that the ones who possess much are relatively few and those who possess almost nothing are many.
Unacceptable culture
“It is the injustice of the poor distribution of the goods and services originally intended for all.”
On Thursday, speaking on intercultural dialogue, Tagle said that while the Catholics should be open to engaging with “traditional and emerging cultures,” it should avoid culture that is “unacceptable” to Christianity, such as corrupt politicians who rob people’s money “for (their) parties and shopping.”
He added that elected officials should consider their election by voters as a “gift from people” and use the people’s money for social services.”
Onaiyekan warned that “the gap between the rich and the poor continues to grow.”
“This makes the misery of the poor more acute and unbearable,” the Nigerian prelate said. “as they live side by side with those who live in affluence or see the high living standards of the affluent in the mass media as unattainable utopia.”
Onaiyekan added the social discrepancy exists in both nation and Church.
“This discrepancy is not only between nations but also within nations,” he said. “What about within the Church itself? We cannot say that our Church is a perfect model of a just world.”
Some 15,00 delegates from 71 countries are attending the IEC which will close on Jan. 31 with a High Mass that will be presided by Cardinal Charles Maung Bo of Burma (Myanmar), appointed by Pope Francis as his personal representative to the congress.
Mass Communion for poor
To show solidarity with the poor, first communicants, a staple event of the IEC since the spiritual festival started in the 19th century, will come from poor communities, said Cebu Archbishop and 51st IEC president Jose Palma.
Ma. Georgia Cogtas, a rehabilitated street child who’s now a Church volunteer in Cebu, said that the mass Communion of poor children and young adults was “to make sure that the poor have a face in the International Eucharistic Congress.”
To lead the clergy in giving communion today will be Ricardo Cardinal Vidal, who was 7 years old when he received his first Communion during the 33rd IEC in Manila. Now 84, Vidal is retired archbishop of Cebu (See related story on Page A7.).
Papal legate
Meanwhile, the papal representative visited Boystown, a home for orphaned or abandoned children run by the Salesians of Don Bosco here.
Earlier, Bo visited the inmates of the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center.