Lima, Peru
AP
Archbishop Carlos Castillo on Sunday looked out over a cathedral full of faces – none of them now alive.
The cleric had his church filled with more than 5,000 portraits of those who have died in the pandemic that is burning across Peru and South America as a whole, using his broadcast homily to criticise a health system he said “is based on egotism and on business and not on mercy and solidarity with the people.”
The Archbishop of Lima Carlos Castillo swings a censer over several of the more than 4,000 portraits of COVID-19 victims during the Corpus Christi Mass at the Cathedral of Lima, Peru, Sunday, on 14th June. PICTURE: AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd.
COVID-19 has taken at least 6,400 lives in the nation of some 32 million people – a toll second only to that of Brazil within South America.
Hundreds of them have died without receiving help from the health system, and many families have faced financial ruin due to the cost of trying to care for the ill. The nation as a whole faces a projected economic contraction of 12 per cent this year, and Castillo called for solidarity with the poor.
“An even harder moment is coming,” he said. “It would be terrible if in the times to come we have thousands of these photos – but dead of hunger.”
Church workers spent days filling the pews with images of coronavirus victims, and when the 84 pews were filled, the Archbishop ordered thousands of photos more attached to the base of the columns that rise to the arched ceiling.