Pope Francis told members of the world's wealthy political and
economic elite on Wednesday that they should not be deaf to the cry of
the poor and must consider their own role in creating inequality.
New technologies such as robotics must also not be allowed to replace
humans with "soulless machines," he said in a message to the World
Economic Forum in Davos.
"To all of you I appeal once more: 'Do not forget the poor!'", he said.
The pope, who wrote a major encyclical on climate change and
protection of the environment last year, also urged business leaders to
see to it that the planet does not become "an empty garden."
The annual Davos meeting brings together many of the world's
wealthiest and most powerful people to consider issues such as
economics, climate change and war, with an eye to working on solutions
to them.
It has been criticized by anti-globalization activists and others,
however, as a forum for organizations that have been responsible for the
problems in the first place.
They are boosted by reports such as one from charity Oxfam estimating
that 1 percent of the world's population owns 99 percent of the wealth.
Francis, who has made the defense of the poor a hallmark of his
papacy and has in the past called money "the dung of the devil", said
businesses and wealthy societies must acknowledge their role in creating
poverty.
"Weeping for other people's pain does not only mean sharing in their
sufferings, but also and above all realizing that our own actions are a
cause of injustice and inequality," he said in the text of a message
read for him by a top Vatican cardinal.
"Once we realize this, we become more fully human, since
responsibility for our brothers and sisters is an essential part of our
common humanity. Do not be afraid to open your minds and hearts to the
poor. In this way, you will give free rein to your economic and
technical talents, and discover the happiness of a full life, which
consumerism of itself cannot provide," he said.
Francis, the first pope from the global south, has in the past
excoriated unbridled capitalism, calling for the redistribution of
wealth and for economic policies that put people above profits,
positions that have prompted criticism from economic leaders.
"We must never allow the culture of prosperity to deaden us, to make
us incapable of feeling compassion at the outcry of the poor, weeping
for other people's pain, and sensing the need to help them, as though
all this were someone else's responsibility and not our own," he said in
the message read by Cardinal Peter Turkson of Ghana, the Vatican's
justice minister.
Francis addressed the theme of this year's Davos meeting, "Mastering
the Fourth Industrial Revolution," in which digital technology,
artificial intelligence robotics and autonomous vehicles are expected to
become ubiquitous in developed economies.
"In the face of profound and epochal changes, world leaders are
challenged to ensure that the coming 'fourth industrial revolution', the
result of robotics and scientific and technological innovations, does
not lead to the destruction of the human person – to be replaced by a
soulless machine," he said.
Business and economic leaders had a duty to prevent "the
transformation of our planet into an empty garden for the enjoyment of a
chosen few."
"I urge you, then, to take up anew your conversation on how to build
the future of the planet, 'our common home', and I ask you to make a
united effort to pursue a sustainable and integral development," he
said.
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