David, the bishop of the Philippines’ poor and marginalised

The 65-year-old bishop of Kalookan is one of three Filipino cardinals in the conclave. As a priest, bishop, and then cardinal he always showed a missionary attention for the downtrodden. He was the strongest voice against former President Duterte's "war on drugs" and promoted rehabilitation programmes for drug addicts. He warns against looking at the conclave as a horse race, highlighting the sacredness of the election of a pontiff.

by Santhos Digal

Manila (AsiaNews) – One of the distinctive qualities of Card Pablo Virgilio Siongco David, bishop of Kalookan, National Capital Region, is his care for the downtrodden.

The 65-year-old prelate has always nurtured a sincere passion for social justice and has actively engaged with marginalised groups, regardless of his status as a priest, bishop or cardinal. His hallmark has been to go to the fringes of society with pastoral care, compassion and commitment.

Since he became bishop of Caloocan in 2016, Card David has set up about 20 mission stations within his diocese "to better serve the poorest of the poor.” The diocese covers the cities of Caloocan, Navotas and Malabon, home to 1.3 million people.

Most local Catholics are poor, informal settlers and internal migrants who move from rural areas to the cities in search of work. They live in crowded slums, without many basic amenities and habitable surroundings.

Lacking opportunities for work, housing, education, health care and welfare programs, they are victims of exploitation and injustice that violate their freedom, human rights and dignity.

To meet their pastoral needs and concerns, the cardinal launched the Urban Poor Ministry in cooperation with other Church organisations.

He also called on several congregations to work in mission stations for vulnerable communities facing poverty, human trafficking, which is particularly felt in the Southeast Asia, migration and extrajudicial executions.

With a special ministry dedicated to the prevention of exploitation and the protection of vulnerable communities, Card David has relentlessly defended their rights and dignity.

In October 2024, at a meeting of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines, which he chairs for a second consecutive term, the cardinal stressed that “addressing poverty is essential to building a Church that truly serves the poor.”

According to him, the Church must recognise and respect the dignity of the poor. “If the poor don’t come to the Church, the Church must go to them,” David said in 2024.

The bishop of Kalookan is also involved with prisoners and people deprived of their liberty, especially young offenders, who often languish for a long time in a cell without access to legal procedures.

In this regard, the cardinal stressed that taking care of prisoners is a Christian duty and so he often visits prisoners, interacts with them, and celebrates Mass in prisons, as did Pope Francis.

The prelate has also been able to stand up to former President Rodrigo Duterte and his brutal war on drugs, expressing his disapproval of the transformation of the diocese into a deadly battlefield for innocent people.

Despite Duterte's many tirades against the Church and its leaders, including the cardinal himself, David took action to follow up the wave of violence and killings by creating a team for the correct documentation of the facts.

The cardinal remains one of the most outspoken critics of Duterte's war on drugs, condemning drug-related killings and urging respect for human dignity.

The prelate also initiated a community-based drug rehabilitation programme, based on three main aspects: patient care, family care, and community care.

He even set aside a special place to bury the poor and drug addicts, victims of Duterte's war, who did not have the means for a dignified funeral while their families waited for justice in the courts.

Card David says he is aligned with Pope Francis’s vision for a more welcoming and listening Church, which is something that requires continuous efforts. When the pontiff died on 21 April, the cardinal said that he was a "builder of bridges."

The bishop of Kalookan, one of three Filipino cardinals created by the late pontiff, said that, “Francis was a shepherd who walked with his people, often choosing the dusty road toward the peripheries rather than the comfort of the centre,” David said.

Following the pope’s example, he shared some of the pontiff’s priorities and principles such as visiting the peripheries, promoting a synodal Church, and highlighting the inclusive and welcoming nature of the Church, which ought to be a “field hospital – welcoming, healing, and journeying together”.

In recent days, he talked critically about the process of finding a successor, warning against those who see the conclave as a horse race or TV show.

“Creating or sharing campaign videos, even with good intentions, risks turning a sacred discernment into a worldly spectacle,” David said. “It may inadvertently pressure or politicize the conscience of the electors, and distract from the silence and prayer needed to truly hear the voice of the Spirit,” he added. “Instead, let us accompany the electors with our prayers, not our preferences. Let us fast from speculation and feast on hope.”

“If we must speak, let us strive to speak words of encouragement, not endorsement. If we must share something online, let it be Scripture, reflections that edify, prayers that nurture faith, strengthen hope, and foster love – love that alone can bring about justice and peace, mercy and compassion, healing and reconciliation in our wounded world”. 

Indeed, “We found a role model for this in Pope Francis himself. To walk in his memory is to keep alive his spirit,” David stressed.

Sections

Asia Today
Ecclesia in Asia
Indian Mandala
Red Lanterns
The Eastern Gate
The Russian world

See also

  • Aldona: the Indian town with two cardinals at the conclave

    In a town of just 8,000 inhabitants in the state of Goa lie the roots of both the Indian Filipe Neri Ferrão and the Pakistani Joseph Coutts, who from this afternoon are participating as electors in the selection of the new pontiff. A sign of the Church of the peripheries, but also of the vitality of a community founded four centuries ago by Portuguese Franciscans. And in these hours, it is also a symbol of the thirst for peace between the two countries now plunged into a new crisis over Kashmir.

  • Tagle: from Manila to the world, among the poor as a way of mission

    Francis picked the archbishop emeritus of Manila as pro-prefect of the Dicastery for Evangelisation. The 67-year-old Philippine cardinal has been one of the foremost figures of Asian Catholicism for more than 20 years. A brilliant preacher for years, he has commented on the Gospel every week in a very popular TV programme. For him, “The Church is renewed in her identity when she is missionary, that is, when she bears witness to the Kingdom of God in dialogue with cultures, religions”.

  • Maeda: the cardinal who preaches with haikus, a strong voice against the A-bomb

    The archbishop of Osaka-Takamatsu, 76, is one of two Japanese cardinals at the conclave. His great-grandfather, who personally lived the experience of the "hidden Christians", told him stories that sparked his priestly vocation. A master of poetry, he is also a passionate fisherman. The son of a survivor of the Nagasaki atomic bomb, he strongly condemns nuclear rearmament and deterrence.

  • Pizzaballa: The Return of Jerusalem to a Conclave

    From Bergamo, 60-year-old Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa brings the “Mother Church” back among the electors of a Pope for the first time in centuries. Living in Jerusalem for the past 35 years, the Franciscan friar has long been engaged in dialogue with both Judaism and Islam. He served for 12 years as Custos of the Holy Land. Throughout the many tragic episodes of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict—including the past two years—he has called for cultivating the freedom of peace, refusing to be crushed by hatred, and making the Gospel resound once again in the land of Jesus.

AsiaNews Weekly
News from Asia that matters

Subscribe to the newsletter to receive verified news, analysis and insights from Asian countries every week.

Subscribeto the newsletter
P.I.M.E. Centro Missionario
Agenzia Fides
P.I.M.E. Brasil
Radio Mondo
Mondo e Missione
P.I.M.E. U.S.A.
TV 2000