Holy
Moolah: John Paul II Canonization Sponsored by Banks, Oil
Giant
By Alastair Jamieson And Claudio Lavanga NBC News
April 26, 2014 http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/new-saints/holy-moolah-john-paul-ii-canonization-sponsored-banks-oil-giant-n88811
ROME -- He has railed
against the “tyranny” of global capitalism and the
“idolatry of money” but even Pope Francis needs a
little corporate coin sometimes – as proven by the list of
sponsors for Sunday’s canonizations.
An oil and gas giant,
several banks and Switzerland-based food megacorp Nestle are
among more than a dozen financial backers of the Rome event.
Hundreds of thousands of
people are due to come to the Eternal City to see Pope John Paul
II, who reigned from 1978 to 2005, and Pope John XXIII, who was
pontiff from 1958 to 1963, canonized as saints.
The list of sponsors is
dominated by Italian corporations, including energy firms Eni
and Enel, banking company Intesa SanPaolo and railway network
Ferrovie Italiane.
It’s perhaps an unlikely roll call of names to be
associated with a Vatican event, six months after Pope
Francis launched an attack on the global economic system as
part of his call for a greater focus on the needs of the
world’s poor.
Those remarks were dismissed by
radio host Rush Limbaugh as “pure Marxism” –
an accusation that forced the pope to reassure conservative
critics that he was not embarking on a political campaign.
The Catholic Church sits upon enormous assets - the Vatican
Bank manages $8 billion worth of worldwide investments as well
as 33,000 accounts for clergy and parishes – but its
governing body, the Holy See, made a loss of $18.4 million in
2011.
The presence of corporate sponsors might instead be explained by
Rome’s perilous financial position. It faces a budget
deficit of $1.17 billion and in February was turned down for a
massive central government bailout to help it pay city employees
and buy fuel for buses.
Father
Thomas Reese, a senior analyst with the National Catholic Reporter,
said as such events brought income to businesses including
hotels and restaurants it was "appropriate that they
help."
He added: "As one
archbishop told me, 'You can't pay bills with holy
cards.' Having an event to which hundreds of thousands of
people attend, is expensive. Better to get some corporate
sponsors than to take money out of the poor box for it."
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