Poverty was among synod's major concerns, Philippine cardinal says

This story appears in the Synod on the Family feature series. View the full series.

Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila said the Synod of Bishops on the family was more than a series of discussions on divorce and gay unions and that the impact of poverty on families, especially in Asia, was a major concern of participants.

"Poverty is really affecting the Filipino family in a dramatic way," Tagle told reporters at a news conference Thursday.

The prelate explained that while he was in Italy he was part of a forum on families and afterward a number of contract workers from the Philippines approached him in tears. Tagle said one worker told him, "If it weren't for hardship I would never have left my wife and children behind."

The Philippines is among the world's top countries that sends workers overseas. More than 9 million Filipinos, about 10 percent of the Philippines population, live overseas and about half of them migrated for work, the government has reported.

Tagle said migration was a major concern in synod discussions.

"Couples separate not because they're mad at each other," the cardinal said. "They separate because they love their family and they bear the pain of separation just to find jobs elsewhere. So we ask, 'What kind of pastoral care can we give for the [contract] workers to remain faithful to their families ... and what can we do for those left behind?' "

Tagle pointed to financial insecurity as a hindrance to marriage and a burden on family life. Young people are delaying marriage because of a lack of jobs in the Philippines and elsewhere and thoughts that they could not support a family, he said, adding that for those who have work, the breadwinner is focused on hanging on to the job and "putting the family second."

The bishops also credited grandparents and extended family members for their roles in raising children because of the economic stresses placed on nuclear families.

Tagle also reported on preparations for Pope Francis' planned January visit to the Philippines. He said officials from the Vatican planned to visit in November to check on arrangements and that specific details of the trip would be released at the end of November of early December.

Tagle also said the Philippine government is "very concerned" about security for Pope Francis during his Jan. 15-19 stay. The cardinal said the pope "deserves" the effort under way by the government and the military for his safety.

In September, the Islamic State militant group that has occupied much of Syria and Iraq said it would target the pope, possibly during one of his overseas visits. In 1970, an attempt was made on Blessed Paul VI's life during a visit to the Philippines. And in 1995, authorities uncovered a plot by al-Qaida members to assassinate St. John Paul II on his visit to the nation.

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