The incoming president of the Catholic bishops' conference urged top
clerics on Thursday to focus their attention on the victims of this
week’s earthquake in the central Philippines and not on collapsed
churches.
“I think our focus should be on the needy, not
ourselves,” said Archbishop Socrates Villegas, who will take over the
role as conference president on December 1.
“If at the point of a calamity [bishops] still think of my building, my church, my diocese… it’s not Christ-like,” he said.
“We
should focus all our attention and resources on [the provinces of]
Bohol and Cebu because that’s where the needy are,” Villegas told
ucanews.com.
He was responding to calls by several bishops who
have urged their priests to check the structural integrity of church
buildings after several centuries-old churches in Bohol collapsed during
Tuesday’s quake.
The National Commission for the Culture and
Arts on Wednesday said four historic churches declared “national
cultural treasures” by the government were damaged.
Bishop
Leonardo Medroso of Tagbilaran told ucanews.com on Wednesday that these
churches were beyond repair and that all 58 churches in Bohol province
were damaged.
In Cebu City, the bell tower of the country’s oldest church, the Basilica Minore de Santo Nino, collapsed.
Meanwhile,
the social action arm of the Catholic bishops' conference announced on
Wednesday that it is allocating at least US$9,000 as an initial fund to
assist earthquake victims in Bohol.
Father Edwin Gariguez,
executive secretary of Caritas Philippines, said the resources of
Tagbilaran and Talibon dioceses were not enough to respond to the needs
of victims.
“We are monitoring the distribution of services and
will be ready to complement the emergency efforts of affected dioceses,”
Gariguez said on Wednesday.
He said resources from other dioceses are being tapped to provide emergency assistance to affected areas.
"Information
and assessment reports are now being sent to Caritas member
organizations to appeal for immediate emergency assistance," Gariguez
said.
Authorities on Thursday said the death toll from the earthquake had reached 158.
The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said at least 3.4 million people had been affected by the quake.
The agency said at least 600 homes were destroyed while more than 1,400 were damaged.
The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology has reported more than 100 aftershocks in Bohol since the quake.