Irish
rocker and anti-poverty campaigner Bono was back in the Vatican on
Friday to thank the Catholic Church for its support of the Drop the Debt
campaign a decade ago and to discuss further ways of working together
on aid and development.
During
an almost hour long meeting the cardinal and the rock star turned
activist talked about the huge success of the Jubilee 2000 campaign to
free the poorest countries from their burden of foreign debts.
Thanks to
the success of that popular movement, Bono said, World Bank figures
show that “there are an extra 52 million children going to school” as
governments have been able to invest in education instead of debt
repayments.
Bono said he was encouraging the cardinal to communicate
to ordinary people in the pews the extraordinary impact they’d made by
turning out on the streets in support of that campaign.
He said the
Church deserves “incredible credit for being in the vanguard of that
movement.……it was an interfaith movement and it was also what you might
call inter-disciplinary because you had priests and nuns walking
alongside punk rockers and musicians and sports people and soccer mums…
it was a great panoply of characters…..but I just think the Church
hasn’t done a good job yet of telling people what they’ve achieved and
we were just trying to figure out how best to do that.”
The U2 front
man, who met with Pope John Paul II to seek support for his humanitarian
work, said he’d “be delighted” to meet with Pope Benedict XVI.
During
his private audience with the former elderly pontiff, Bono’s famously
gave him his blue fly-shades to try on.
He also received from the Pope a
silver crucifix which he pulled out from under his shirt to show me – I
still wear it, he said with a smile.
And he still clearly believes very
much in the Catholic Church as an important partner in the struggle to
improve the lives of the poorest of the poor.