Pope to young economists:
'together for global change'
The Basilica of Saint Francis in Assisi |
Pope Francis sends a letter to Young Economists and
Entrepreneurs Worldwide who have been invited to participate in an event
scheduled for March 2020.
By Linda Bordoni
I am writing, Pope Francis says in
his letter,
“to invite you take part in an initiative very close to my heart”, an event he
says, that will allow him to meet young economists who are interested in “a
different kind of economy: one that brings life not death, one that is
inclusive and not exclusive, humane and not dehumanizing, one that cares for
the environment and does not despoil it.”
The event he is referring to is a conference to be held in Assisi from 26
to 28 March 2020entitled “Economy of Francis.”
The need to re-animate the economy
Expressing his belief that there is a need to “re-animate”
global economy, the Pope says Assisi, a city that symbolizes a humanism of
fraternity, is the right place.
“Saint John Paul II chose Assisi as the icon of a culture of
peace. For me, it is also a fitting place to inspire a new economy” he
writes.
The Pope goes on to note that the life and vision of St.
Francis are so timely they can "give hope to our future and benefit not
only the poorest of the poor, but our entire human family”.
Protection of planet and social justice connected
He says that as emphasized in his encyclical ‘Laudato Sì’,
protection of the planet and social justice are profoundly interconnected and
solutions must be found to the structural problems of the economy.
“We need to correct models of growth incapable of
guaranteeing respect for the environment, openness to life, concern for the
family, social equality, the dignity of workers and the rights of future
generations” he writes.
The appeal Saint Francis received from the Crucifix to go
and “repair my house which, as you see, is falling into ruin”, Pope Francis
continues, “increasingly concerns the environment, which urgently demands a
sound economy and a sustainable development that can heal its wounds and assure
us of a worthy future”.
The Pope makes it clear that his message is addressed above
all to young people who “can hear in [their] hearts the ever more anguished
plea of the earth and its poor, who cry out for help and for responsibility,
for people who will respond and not turn away”.
Young people protagonists of change
Young people, he continues, are the protagonists of
necessary change: “your universities, your businesses and your organizations
are workshops of hope for creating new ways of understanding the economy and
progress, for combating the culture of waste, for giving voice to those who
have none and for proposing new styles of life. Only when our
economic and social system no longer produces even a single victim, a single
person cast aside, will we be able to celebrate the feast of universal fraternity”.
In his letter Pope Francis also underscores the need for a
communion of intentions that goes beyond “differences of creed and nationality”
and is inspired by “an ideal of fraternity attentive above all to the poor and
excluded”.
Francis of Assisi, the Pope concludes, “offers us an ideal
and, in some sense, a programme. For me, who took his name, he is a
constant source of inspiration. With you, and through you, I will appeal to
some of our best economists and entrepreneurs who are already working on the global
level to create an economy consistent with these ideals. I am confident
that they will respond. And I am confident above all in you young people,
who are capable of dreaming and who are prepared to build, with the help of
God, a more just and beautiful world”.
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