SUN NOV 18, 2018 / 6:40 AM EST
Pope Francis celebrates the Mass marking the Roman Catholic Church's World Day of the Poor, at Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican November 18, 2018.
REUTERS/REMO CASILLI
(Reuters) - Pope Francis criticized rising wealth inequality and the treatment of migrants on Sunday, saying the world should not ignore those "tossed by the waves of life".
"Injustice is the perverse root of poverty," Francis said at a Mass marking the Roman Catholic Church's annual World Day of the Poor. "The cry of the poor daily becomes stronger but heard less, drowned out by the din of the rich few, who grow ever fewer and more rich."
Francis also reiterated his support for migrants saying that people must pay attention to "all those forced to flee their homes and native land for an uncertain future".
His remarks came as hundreds of migrants from a caravan of Central Americans were stalled at the U.S.-Mexico border after being denied entry to the United States, although Francis made no direct reference to the situation in the United States.
A report this year by Oxfam said 3.7 billion people, or half of the global population, saw no increase in their wealth in 2017, while 82 percent of the wealth generated last year went to the richest one percent of the global population.
(Reporting by Giselda Vagnoni; Editing by Susan Fenton)
----------------------
P.S.
It's ludicrous for the Bishop of Rome to talk about "a blind eye" regarding the poor while my eyes see a golden chalice in his hands and two other golden artifacts in the picture above. Simply a hyprocritical dichotomy!
No comments:
Post a Comment