Assets
of Filipinos are faith, family and community spirit
(Vatican Radio) Record numbers of Filipinos are expected to turn
out on Sunday for a final outdoor Mass in Manila marking the concluding day of
Pope Francis’ pastoral visit to Asia. Ahead of the Mass, the Pope is also due
to meet with young people and with leaders of other faiths gathered at the
University of Santo Tomas.
Among those who’ve
been following closely the events of this three day visit to the Philippines is
Oscar Solis, Auxiliary Bishop of Los Angeles, California and the first Filipino
bishop to be ordained in the United States. He talked to the head of Vatican
Radio’s English Section, Sean-Patrick Lovett, who’s in Manila covering this
papal trip, about the huge diaspora of Filipinos living and working in other
countries around the world.
Bishop Solis says latest surveys show that three million
Filipinos are living in the United States, with the largest community in the
state of California. In Los Angeles alone there are between three and four
hundred thousand, the majority of whom are Catholic, since 80% of people in the
Philippines belong to the Catholic Church.
Many of the
immigrants, he says, work in the medical profession, but they do a wide variety
of jobs and are an important source of revenue for the Filipino government
since foreign workers generate around six billion dollars in remittances that
they send home from abroad.
Bishop Solis says
Filipinos are the “modern missionaries of our Church”. They were gifted by the
faith of their colonisers, the Spanish, he says, but now they bring that faith
wherever they go. The cultural traits of his countrymen and women, Bishop
Solis, says, are their focus on the family, their religiosity, their hard work
and their community spirit – these are the assets they contribute to both
society and to the Church.
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