Madrid priests from poor areas rail against €60m papal visit

MORE THAN 100 priests from Madrid’s poorest parishes have joined the clamour of protest over the cost of Pope Benedict XVI’s …

MORE THAN 100 priests from Madrid’s poorest parishes have joined the clamour of protest over the cost of Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to Madrid next week.

An umbrella group – the Priests’ Forum – says the estimated €60 million cost of the papal visit, not counting security, cannot be justified at a time of massive public sector cuts and 20 per cent unemployment in Spain.

Evaristo Villar (68), a member of the group, said he objected to the multinationals with which the Catholic church had had to ally itself to cover the costs of the “showmanship” of the event.

“The companies that are backing World Youth Day and the Pope’s visit leave much to be desired. They are the ones who, together with international capital, have caused the crisis. We are not against the Pope’s visit, we are against the way it is being staged.”

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The more than 100 corporate sponsors of the event include Coca-Cola, Telefonica and Santander. Opponents of the visit have set up a Facebook page calling for a boycott of the sponsors. Some 140 groups, among them the secular organisation Europa Laica (Secular Europe), are against the visit.

“Catholics can go wherever they like in Madrid but the freedom of movement of the rest of us is restricted,” said Francisco Delgado, leader of Europa Laica, on discovering that the city had prohibited his group’s proposed march.

Europa Laica plans to march under the slogans “Not a penny of my taxes for the Pope” and “For a secular state”. There is particular ire that the some 500,000 pilgrims expected in the city will get free transport. Madrid metro fares rose by 50 per cent on Monday.

“With the economic crisis we are going through, we can’t pay for this. The church should set the example,” said a spokesman for the Indignados movement, which has staged high-profile protests in central Madrid.

“They propose to spend €60 million when the regional government has just cut €40 million from the education budget.”

Yago de la Cierva, executive director of World Youth Day 2011, an event built around the papal visit, said: “We have made a huge effort to be moderate and economically responsible . . . young people today, they like big events and the church uses all the tools that exist to present the message of Jesus Christ.”

Interest in the Catholic Church is on the wane among the young in Spain. A survey by the national statistics office showed the number of believers aged 18 to 24 had fallen by 56 per cent in the past 10 years.

Pope Benedict's visit to Barcelona last November was poorly received, with the popemobile forced to drive at top speed past small groups of the faithful along mainly deserted streets. – ( Guardianservice)