The call of Pope Francis turned to cash.

Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the Argentine Jesuit of Italian bloodline, assumed the Papacy as Pope Francis on March 13, 2013 and it has never been the same for the Catholic faith as the refreshing messages on unity, humility and respect transcends religious boundaries. The large crowd which the Pope drew from predominantly Buddhist Sri Lanka (nbcnews.com) is evidence of that. Hope is being weaved, for a world divided.

For many survivors of 2013’s Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), especially for those who are still in tents and makeshift homes, Hope is, but a glimmer. The Pope disproves that, with his message of “Mercy and Compassion” to the only Catholic nation of Asia and and it was off to the Philippines, he went on
January 15, 2015.

The Filipino welcome of Pope Francis was electric, from the fiesta mood at the Villamor Airbase in Pasay to the Manila streets that was lined with throngs of the excited. That was – Day 1.

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Day 2 of the Papal agenda is packed and included in it, is the “Meeting of Families” at the Mall of Asia Arena. “According to Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle, the said event will convene families who are faced with the “three most difficult challenges” present in the contemporary Philippine society: poverty, migration, and disability (inquirer.net).”

Poverty, migration and a disability, that is beyond the physiological, are all rooted in the inability of the Philippines to address the widening gap of the rich and poor. The aperture is wide but many are too deluded to realize the irony that is in the Philippines, being home to 3 out of the 10 biggest shopping malls on earth catering to hyper-consumerism (huffingtonpost.com).  Philippines has shoppers high rolling on sprees, apathetic to the many who have no access to basic needs. There are also shoppers who spend beyond their means yet endure back-breaking and/or underpaid labor, locally and abroad. Such is the deadly habit prevalent that have contributed to the growth of business empires and made those words: “Poverty, migration and disability”, hovering realities. Realities denied by the lip servicing “Proud to be Filipino”. Realities beyond the Papal event at the Mall of Asia Arena.

And with the chosen venue which is the Mall of Asia Arena, the world class events place of the SM empire, the Philippines is again in denial. While, it is possible that Metro Manila has none such venue of the same caliber to offer, it is notable that it is in SM malls, where 9 out their 10 employees endure the cycle of “endo” (short for end of contract) every six months since 2003 (bulatlat.com). That impeccable business move of adopting labor flexibilsation for undergraduates has been adapted by many businesses and made legal by the economy-centered Arroyo administration through contractualization.:

“DOLE Order No.18-02 declared the practice of contractualization as legal for as long as it does not fall within the category of “labor only contracting”,
which is measured by the amount of capital and control of the supposed employer. Contractualization means replacing regular workers with temporary workers
who receive lower wages with no or less benefits. These temporary workers are sometimes called contractuals, trainees, apprentices, helpers, casuals, piece
raters, agency-hired, project employees, etc. They do the work of regular workers for a specified and limited period of time, usually less then six months.
The work they do is “desirable and necessary” for the company’s survival, but they never become regular employees even if they get rehired repeatedly under
new contracts.” 

SM, as I was told by a credible source, has the lowest rate of contractual employees upon comparison to other mall operators in the Philippines. Still, the value of hard work and meritocracy should be given weight.

The only Catholic nation in Asia has become a nation of Contractuals, and for what purpose? To reduce the cost of the long-term benefits due of a regular employee, at the detriment of a population that is highly dependent on regular employment. The hardest hit of the demography are those who have anemic educational background, and such is common to the poor who cannot afford matriculation or send their families to the Ivy League schools. The poor who have been made ignorant by the dumbing entertainment and have been diminished as nothing but numbers for every political agenda.

10606234_10204316945377021_1701066632923144282_nIt’s business survival, after all.

And it’s business as usual in Fiesta Philippines while the Filipinos’ knack for spending is vultured upon by the enterprising, from the street vendors to the biggest of malls, as the name and face of Pope Francis is commodified in ballers, fans, shirts or whatever merchandise printable!

Such exemplary show of “Mercy and Compassion”, isn’t it? Pale in comparision to the likes of this fund raiser for a brain tumor operation (< please do click on the link to help)! Could it be that part of the sales proceeds of each merchandise will go to our still recovering calamity stricken kababayans? Sarcasm aside, opportunists have defied and insulted the message of Pope Francis during his ““Apostolic Exhortation” that laid out poverty and economic inequality as two of the main concerns of this Papacy. He used strong terms like “idolatry of money” … and speaks of unfettered capitalism as “a new tyranny” while praying and pleading with lawmakers to work toward  providing all people with “dignified work, education, and healthcare.”“. Pope Francis is a popular religious leader relevant to our times, but how many can see through the haze of all the commercial hype?

It’s feels like Christmas all over again!
Spirits are high and merchandise abound,
shoppers are again blind to the disposable workforce affected by the vicious cycle.

We have become a nation that has forgotten our humanity and what we choose to see is commodity.

FUTURE2Pope Francis has been big on his campaign for the poor and the suffering. Makes me wonder, how much of Pope Francis does one see in a Papal souvenir when it served to profit an opportunist instead of the oppressed?

While many hopes are hinged on the presence of the well-loved and respected Catholic leader, as he is seen as the much needed catalyst of change for a nation that seeks its salvation through political solutions, facts from the World Bank may also give the rude awakening that goes with spiritual healing:

“…the country’s Gini coefficient, a measure of inequality, stands at 0.43…The World Bank said the Gini coefficient of inequality varies between 0, which
reflects complete equality and 1, which indicates complete inequality.The World Bank said the high economic growth that the Philippines posted was not able
to benefit the poor. Further, the World Bank said for over 20 years, efforts to reduce poverty in the Philippines have been slow. “With high inequality and a
lack of structural transformation, growth largely benefited the non-poor,” the World Bank said. (investphilippines.info)

The future we hate, is the present that the Philippines is in denial of.

Pope Francis calls on our poor little rich nation to live and breath MERCY and COMPASSION but some chose to commodify and capitalize on an event aimed to be spiritual.

Photo souce: http://balita.ph/2015/01/04/preparing-for-pope-francis-visit/attachment/150103132049/

Photo souce: http://balita.ph/2015/01/04/preparing-for-pope-francis-visit/attachment/150103132049/

The photo of this little old boy helping his father install one of the many ‪#‎PapalVisitPH‬ tarps is a strong testimony of how much of a steward our people has been clearly showing that the “Daang Matuwid” is not a mantra that shows us our center!

I quote the Pope’s words, as verses from ‪‎Matthew 23 are cited‬, in the hope that our faith, regardless of religious affiliation, will may be seen beyond the fiestas celebrating saints, the numbers at every religious celebration and the ‪#‎PopeFrancisPH‬-‪#‎PopeInPH‬-‪#‎PopeTYSM‬-‪#‎DearPope‬ hashtags:

“…While everyone is a sinner,…The corrupt are focused on going through the motions, Pope Francis said; they are “men of good manners but bad habits. Jesus called them ‘whitewashed tombs'” that “appear beautiful on the outside, but inside are full of dead men’s bones and every kind of filth.” Jesus called them hypocrites, because they turned away from “the salvation of the Lord’s love” and a theology built on faith in God for “a theology of obligation,” of minute laws and “must-dos. “By refusing God’s love, they refused “the freedom the Lord offers,” and instead followed “the logic of necessity where there is no room for the Lord” and where “they don’t understand mercy or pity. “That’s why the people loved Jesus so much, the pope said, because “they needed mercy and compassion and they went to ask for it from the Lord.” (Click to read the Full text)

Hope is being weaved, let us not be divided.

20 Replies to “The call of Pope Francis turned to cash.”

  1. Thank you for speaking out against the practice of labor contractualization and the irony of having the Pope’s visit at a commercial establishment that hires most of its workers under its premises. This practice is keeping millions of young workers mired in poverty. It took a friend of mine 6 months to find a job. He had to borrow money from me to get all the clearances, documents, health physicals, new wardrobe, transportation to numerous interviews. He got the job. It was only a three month contract. Now the process has to start all over again. He did not have the job long enough to save any money.

    This is an evil practice. It may have been designed to help businesses that are on the edge of bankruptcy. Instead, it has been perverted and has become the mainstay of an operation that maximizes profits for owners, at the expense of the workers.

    This is precisely the type of heartless capitalism that the Pope has repeatedly spoken out against. There seems to be a real disconnect between religion and conscience among the Catholics in the Philippines. Please join the Pope and work to repeal this practice and give job security to our workers.

    1. Sadly, people like Henry Sy are admired by a lot of people and speaking out against his practices would make others label us envious, lazy poor people.

      1. The man is a shrewd businessman. There’s a law about contractualization so why not make the most of it. He may be thinking, “Hey, I’m giving jobs to many Filipinos, I’m supporting many businesses, I’m donating vast amounts to different causes, my corporation attracts foreign investors… The only time I’m not doing it right is when I’m given the chance.”

        Uncle Ben said, “With great power comes great responsibility.” In Luke 12:48 the scripture said, “everyone to whom much was given, of him much will be required”. Somehow when you’re wealthy or powerful, you just do things for the sake of having or keeping your wealth and power thus you won’t think twice on making the Pope’s visit an opportunity to make money and trample on renewing goodwill and faith. That’s why this visit from the Pope is very important for the Filipinos. Many need to find their way back to good and honest practices and being responsible.

        1. Employee Regularization Vs. Business Survival is the common argument of many business people. How much profit is enough anyway? I know for a fact that for a person of greed, there will be never be enough.

      2. @anonymous;

        If you speak out against a practice and back up your assertion with facts and real life examples, you will convince people.

        Many economists, like Robert Reich have shown that the continued concentration of wealth in the hands of fewer and fewer people at the top is bad for an economy. “Trickle down” does not work. That is the reason the American recovery has stalled and why the Middle Class is shrinking. An economy should grow from the middle out. The people at the top can only spend so much money. Most of their wealth is invested in the stock market. Entrepreneurs do not create jobs. CUSTOMERS create jobs. When people are kept poor through unethical business practices, they have less money to buy things. Growing the middle class will best grow the economy and the country. There are many reasons why the “mallification” of the country is not a good thing. I wish someone who is smarter than I am would write an article on it.

        1. Ah, now that you’ve mentioned this, Sea Bee — have you read Piketty’s [someone give me the italic bbCode for this]Capital in the Twenty-First Century[/please I beg you]? (I haven’t, and I’ve been told centuries of economic data spent on “proving” the very thing you’re saying and more makes it inaccessible to the likes of me, and furthermore that the policy recommendations are not only impractical but undesirable — but inquiring minds gotta dig.)

    2. Most welcome, Sea Bee. You made me joyful in knowing that the purpose of this article is accomplished.

      There is pain every time I gas up, shop or do my groceries because I know, the faces smiling at me and giving me an excellent service will soon be facing #endo. I used to believe that giving commendations can help in securing a tenure, I even wrote about it at http://definitelyfilipino.com/blog/2012/10/07/endo-end-of-contract/ but unfortunately, good customer feedback no longer has any bearing to a contractual. So sad really. I can only hope that politicians and businessmen will heed this:

      ““Apostolic Exhortation” that laid out poverty and economic inequality as two of the main concerns of this Papacy. He used strong terms like “idolatry of money” … and speaks of unfettered capitalism as “a new tyranny” while praying and pleading with lawmakers to work toward providing all people with “dignified work, education, and healthcare.”“.

  2. Compassion and Mercy?…I have not found these traits on our Leaders…It’s me, myself, and me again…after Pope Francis is gone; bad to the bad habits of Stealing and Corruption..

  3. The ‘CONTRACTUALS’ is a cost reducing formula born out of the USA/EU and is a way to maximize profits and induce poverty on the worker.

    The ‘don’t like the job, get another one’ doesn’t work as the jobs all suck. it is the little bitch that implemented this scourge upon the FAIL-IPPINE ‘MASSA’ and she deserves nothing but the severest of penalties.

    In a country as poverty stricken and cheep to operate in, companies and corporations STILL cling to the ‘no benefits’ mantra that sent 70 million jobs out of the EU/USA. and for a paltry P400/E 6.75/$10 a filippine worker can have health insurance thru ‘Phil-Health’ and yet the company/corporation is TOO FUCKIN CHEEP TO PROVIDE IT.SCUMBAGGERY AT ITS WORST.

    A REVOLT IS NECESSARY and a cleansing of the order is called for, what the fuck are you waiting for Filipino ?

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