Many
people have shown sincere astonishment and expressed deep shock when told that
a small group of French billionaires and some big corporations have pledged
close to one billion Euros to finance the restoration of the Notre-Dame
Cathedral. People compare such largesse to the poor response given to recent humanitarian
appeals.
The
gap is indeed abysmal and difficult to understand.
I
do not pretend to know the minds of the very rich. But I have met a few. And
they are indeed much more willing to give money to the arts, the protection of
the natural world, the advancement of scientific research, and other broad
issues than to alleviate poverty and address social issues like the plight of
the homeless or drug addiction. Patron of the arts is a tradition that comes
from the aristocratic times. It occupies a very high position in the status
ladder.
Moreover,
it is also my reading that many of those who became outrageously wealthy
believe that poor people are responsible for their own fate. They kind of share
the moral high ground those who have been successful in life love to place
themselves. From those heights, they look at everyone else as people who have
not been able to create their own life opportunities or have just accepted
their condition without fighting back. Many rich people – and I am only
referring to those who are generous enough to pay for big causes, I am not
talking about the greedy and the corrupt – are convinced that poverty is an
individual responsibility. They do not say it loudly. But they think people
should have tried harder. They also believe that the social security systems
are good enough to take care of those in dire need.
I
am not trying to justify their approach, please be sure of that. I am just
sharing an interpretation. My point is simple. If we do not comprehend the
reasons, we cannot contribute to a meaningful change of the behaviour.
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