The Catholic Church’s World Youth Day (WYD) which Sydney is hosting in July has been sold to the general public on the basis that it will bring a massive boost to the local economy.
Heard it before? Much the same argument was used to persuade Sydneysiders to accept the monstrous security “lockdown” and mass disruption caused by the APEC summit attended by President George Bush and 20 other world leaders, emperors and dictators last September.
The Iemma Government and WYD organisers are spruiking up the festival and the visit by Pope Benedict XVI and trying to allay public concern about the closure of roads (300 of them across the city!), the cancellation of buses, trains and ferries and the massive taxpayer subsidy running into tens of millions of dollars.
One Crikey subscriber phoned CountryLink recently to make a rail booking from Canberra to Sydney during the holy event and was told the services had been suspended for its duration.
WYD communications director Jim Hanna, a former AAP political correspondent, still believes that the event from July 14 to 20 will attract 125,000 overseas pilgrims.
“We are in regular contact with the bishops’ conferences in most of the main countries (and) we check the numbers they give us all the time,” he told The Oz. “What they’re telling us at the moment is that number of 125,000 is about right.”
Oh really? Well, what the Immigration Department is telling Crikey is something quite different. Only 17,000 visas have been issued so far to overseas attendees. Of course, there could be a late rush – there usually is – and the numbers may double or even treble. But that will still be well below the forecasts of Cardinal George Pell and Premier Morris Iemma. And that means the taxpayers will be left holding a huge bill for yet another event fiasco.
What’s slashing the number of potential visitors is the strong Aussie dollar, the rising cost of air fares and the vast distance overseas pilgrims need to travel to reach Sydney from the strongholds of Catholicism in Europe, South America and North America.
The estimated cost of the week-long event is $150 million and rising. The biggest single taxpayer-funded contribution is $41 million to the Australian Jockey Club for the use of Randwick racecourse for a full papal mass and for renovations to Warwick Farm.
This outrageous payment could have been avoided if the mass had been held at Olympic Park, the site of the 2000 Olympics at Homebush, as it was originally intended.
But the Catholic elders stiff-armed the Iemma Government which caved in and switched the venue to the inappropriate racetrack. Taxpayers are now footing the bill for that craven stupidity.
Pope Benedict, who has arrived in the US to meet President Bush and address the United Nations, has said he is “deeply ashamed” over the sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests and has vowed to stop pedophiles becoming priests.
Let’s hope the German-born Joseph Ratzinger stiffens his message by the time he reaches Sydney by vowing to stop priests becoming pedophiles. Heaven knows, we desperately need some positives out of this fiasco-in-the-making.
Any suggestion that the Catholic Church should pay for all this out of the massive subsidy generously handed out to them – and all other religions – by our generous representatives would be nasty and cynical, wouldn’t it?
I am not a supporter of this silly youth Catholic-Fest, however it is worth noting that holders of passports of the following 33 countries do not need to even apply for visas. ETA visas can be obtained on line, through a travel agent, or even at the departing airport through the airline. Additionally of course New Zealand passport have a visa-free entry. So the DIAC figures will not be accurate.
Andoora
Austria
Belgium
Bruni
Canada
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Iceland
Republic of Ireland.
Italy
Japan
Republic of Korea
Liechtenstein
Luxembourg
Malaysia
Malta
Monaco
The Netherlands
Norway
Portugal
Republic of San Marino
Singapore
Spain
Switzerland
Sweden
Taiwan
United Kingdom
United States of America,
and naturally in the circumstances
Vatican City
I’m curious – what genre of journalism does this article by Alex Mitchell fit into? News? Not really, there is nothing in it that hasn’t been in the “old” media weeks ago (except that one person told Alex he couldn’t book a train from Canberra to Sydney). This incudes the misreporting that Homebush was ever considered suitable for WYD – it wasn’t. Is it opinion? Probably yes, because I get the clear impression that Alex is against WYD, either because it costs a lot or because of sexual abuse of children. Alex hasn’t made a serious argument why these mean that WYD is bad. Oh, and for good measure, Alex throws in a bit of soft racism with “the German-born Joseph Ratzinger” . Or is Alex saying Germans are not welcome here? I’m confused by this non-journalism. regards, Paul.
The Pope’s visit will be a big plus in so many ways for Australia and the local Church. He is presently visiting the United States and all media attention has been on the Pope even though there is a concurrent visit from the British Prime Minister.
He will help strengthen some of his brother bishops here who certainly need strengthening and he will insist on the standards that should have been in place in the Seminaries originally to prevent some of the scandals among a minority of the clergy.
Benedict is the key figure in the dialogue which needs to take place between the Christian West and Islam. He has already begun that dialogue and has proposed an agenda for Muslim scholars and Rome to begin some exchanges.
The Catholic Chjurch is the principle provider of non government health care in Australia and catholic education is much sort after even among non Catholics who are tired of the secular system and its nihilism and poor intellectual foundations and lack of rigor.
Well as an ex Catholic, ex alter boy, ex bloody everything really, the Pope visiting from the home of Caligula’s obelisk in St Peter’s Square (actually an oval) better make a good fist of the announcement next week on climate, because it’s ‘his’ breeders and ‘his’ evil doctrine on contraception that will tip us into oblivion. That might be fine for the rapture folks but frankly I think my God never wanted his creation desecrated. And in terms of venue it should have been a book and limited auction, as everyone in the Olympics 2000 accepted. Since when does any responsible event have an open/unlimited no cap on attendance. What arrogance. But you can tell venues are a perverse issue for Catholics like the NSW Right because in St Peters it’s a virtual spook house of gold trinkets and so called holy bodies transmogrified to stone free of earthly decomposition. Great fodder for the superstitious and simple across all cultures and geography to the hath, but also an insult to Jesus example.