Pope Francis

Pope Francis blames workplace accidents on capitalist greed

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Pope Francis blames workplace accidents on capitalist greed

POPE FRANCIS. Pope Francis holds a weekly general audience at Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican, September 6, 2023.

Vatican Media/­Handout via REUTERS

'We are human beings and not machines, unique people and not spare parts,' says Pope Francis, after 5 railway maintenance workers were killed by a passing train in the northern Italian town of Brandizzo

ROME, Italy – Pope Francis on Monday, September 11, blamed accidents at work on excessive profit-seeking and the “idolatry of the market,” in a fresh swipe at unbridled capitalism that has led some right-wing critics to paint him as a far-left radical.

His remarks came two weeks after five railway maintenance workers were killed by a passing train in the northern Italian town of Brandizzo. The accident has been linked to a suspected breach of health and safety regulations.

“Tragedies [in the workplace] begin when the focus is no longer on man, but on productivity, and man turns into a production machine,” Francis said in a speech to the Italian association of people injured at work.

He said he was still thinking about the five men killed in Brandizzo.

Francis likened the frequent reports of workplace tragedies to a “war bulletin.” Such incidents happen when “work becomes dehumanized…and turns into an exasperated race for profit,” he said.

The pope lashed out at “carewashing,” by businesspeople and politicians who “instead of investing in safety [at work] prefer to wash their consciences with some charitable work,” donating to the arts or sports.

“Responsibility towards workers is a priority: life cannot be traded for any reason, especially if it is (the life of the) poor, precarious and fragile. We are human beings and not machines, unique people and not spare parts,” he said.

Soon after he was elected in 2013, Francis said he wanted to lead a “poor Church, for the poor” and has reiterated several times that worrying about the needy was not a form of communism, but a tenet of the Gospel. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!